Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Moulsford Railway Bridge

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Crosses
  
River Thames

Maintained by
  
Network Rail

Design
  
Skew arch

Location
  
Moulsford

Body of water
  
River Thames

Architect
  
Isambard Kingdom Brunel

Locale
  
Moulsford

Heritage status
  
Grade II* listed

Opened
  
1892

Material
  
Brick

Carry
  
Great Western Main Line

Moulsford Railway Bridge thamesmeuks01300filesMyersjpg

Carries
  
Great Western Main Line

Similar
  
River Thames, Gatehampton Railway Bridge, Nuneham Railway Bridge, Appleford Railway Bridge, Winterbrook Bridge

Moulsford Railway Bridge, known locally as "Four Arches" bridge is a pair of parallel bridges located a little to the north of Moulsford and South Stoke in Oxfordshire, UK. It carries the Great Western Main Line from Paddington, London to Wales and the West across the River Thames. It lies between the stations at Goring & Streatley and Cholsey, and crosses the Thames at an oblique angle on the reach between Cleeve Lock and Benson Lock. It is a Grade II* listed structure.

Contents

First bridge

The original bridge was designed to carry two broad gauge tracks by Isambard Kingdom Brunel for the Great Western Railway and was built between 1838 and 1839, at the same time as Maidenhead and Gatehampton railway bridges. It is constructed from red brick with Bath stone quoins as four elliptical skew arches of 62 feet (19 m) span and a headway height of 21 feet 8 inches (6.60 m).

Second bridge

In 1892 the line was converted to quadruple track and a second bridge was built alongside the upstream side of the original and connected to it by girders and brick bridgelets. The second bridge was built to the same profile and dimensions as the original but it lacks the stone quoins of the original and the plain uncut bricks make a jagged pattern where they meet the faces of the bridge. The second bridge is also narrower, having been built to carry a pair of standard gauge tracks.

References

Moulsford Railway Bridge Wikipedia