Puneet Varma (Editor)

Newburn Bridge

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Crosses
  
River Tyne

Construction begin
  
1892

Opened
  
1893

Width
  
8.54 m

Body of water
  
River Tyne

Locale
  
Tyne and Wear, England

Construction end
  
1893

Total length
  
145 m

Location
  
Tyne and Wear

Newburn Bridge

Design
  
4 span steel lattice-girder on three wrought iron, concrete-filled cylinders.

Daily traffic
  
Single road controlled by traffic lights.

Carries
  
Road, Water supply network

Similar
  
River Tyne, Old Haydon Bridge, Warden Railway Bridge, Ridley Bridge, Scotswood Railway Bridge

Newburn Bridge is a road bridge crossing the River Tyne at Newburn in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. It links Newburn, Walbottle and Throckley on the north side of the river with Ryton, Stella and Blaydon on the south side. The bridge is the western most crossing of the Tyne in the county of Tyne and Wear; the next crossing upstream, Wylam Bridge, is in Northumberland.

History

This part of the river has been forded since Roman times because it is the most eastern part of the Tyne that is easily fordable. There have also been numerous ferries operated in the part of the river around Newburn. A bridge was finally built between 1892 and 1893. It was designed by Sandeman & Moncrieff of Newcastle and built by Head Wrightson of Thornaby-on-Tees. It was opened on 21 May 1893. For the first 50 or so years of its use it was a toll bridge, until it was bought by Northumberland in 1947. The toll house on the north east side of the bridge has since been demolished. The bridge used to have two lanes crossing it up until the 1960s. It has since had single road traffic because of the weight limit of 9 tonnes (8.858 long tons; 9.921 short tons), later raised to 10 tonnes (9.842 long tons; 11.02 short tons).

In 2007 the bridge was closed for a number of months for renovation and repainting.

References

Newburn Bridge Wikipedia