Puneet Varma (Editor)

O'Connell Bridge

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Crosses
  
River Liffey

Other name(s)
  
Carlisle Bridge

No. of spans
  
3

Construction started
  
1877

Total length
  
45 m

Body of water
  
River Liffey

Locale
  
Dublin

Width
  
~50m

Address
  
Dublin, Ireland

Opened
  
1795

Location
  
Dublin

Province
  
Leinster

O'Connell Bridge

Material
  
Granite, portland stone

Similar
  
Ha'penny Bridge, Samuel Beckett Bridge, Spire of Dublin, The Custom House, Butt Bridge

dublinbridgetour2014 o connell bridge


O'Connell Bridge (Irish: Droichead Uí Chonaill) is a road bridge spanning the River Liffey in Dublin, and joining O'Connell Street to D'Olier Street, Westmoreland Street and the south quays.

Contents

Luas cross city o connell bridge 2016


History

The original bridge (named Carlisle Bridge for the then Lord Lieutenant of Ireland - Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of Carlisle) was designed by James Gandon, and built between 1791 and 1794.

Originally humped, and narrower, Carlisle bridge was a symmetrical, three semicircular arch structure constructed in granite with a Portland stone balustrade and obelisks on each of the four corners. A keystone head at the apex of the central span symbolises the River Liffey, corresponding to the heads on the Custom House (also designed by James Gandon) which personify the other great rivers of Ireland.

Since 1860, (following similar work on Essex Bridge - now Grattan Bridge), to improve the streetscape and relieve traffic congestion on the bridge, it was intended to widen Carlisle Bridge to bring it to the same width as 70 metres (230 ft) wide Sackville Street (now O'Connell Street) which formed the north side carriageway connection to the Bridge. Between 1877-1880 the bridge was reconstructed and widened. As can be seen on orthophotography it spans now 45 m of the Liffey and is about 50 m wide.

When the bridge was reopened c.1882 it was renamed for Daniel O'Connell when the statue in his honour was unveiled.

In recent years, the lamps that graced the central island have been restored to their five lantern glory. In 2004, a pair of pranksters installed a plaque on the bridge dedicated to Father Pat Noise, which remained unnoticed until May 2006, and is still there as of April 2013.

Arthur Fields, locally known as The Man on The Bridge, took more than 182,000 photographs of pedestrians on the bridge from the 1930s to the 1980s.

References

O'Connell Bridge Wikipedia