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Queen Elizabeth II Bridge, Newcastle upon Tyne

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Carries
  
Tyne and Wear Metro

Maintained by
  
Nexus

Total length
  
360 m

Body of water
  
River Tyne

Construction end
  
August 1978

Crosses
  
River Tyne

Opened
  
6 November 1981

Location
  
Newcastle upon Tyne

Carry
  
Tyne and Wear Metro

Queen Elizabeth II Bridge, Newcastle upon Tyne httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Locale
  
Between Newcastle and Gateshead

Official name
  
Queen Elizabeth II Bridge

Design
  
Steel truss construction with fabricated box chords

Similar
  
River Tyne, King Edward VII Bridge, Redheugh Bridge, High Level Bridge, Swing Bridge - River Tyne

The Queen Elizabeth II Bridge carries the Tyne and Wear Metro between Newcastle upon Tyne and Gateshead over the River Tyne in northeast England. The line is in tunnel on either side of the river and only emerges into open air to cross the bridge.

Contents

History

The bridge was developed as part of the Tyne and Wear Metro system, for which it was purpose-built. It was designed by W. A. Fairhurst & Partners, and constructed by Cementation Construction Ltd. and the Cleveland Bridge & Engineering Company at a cost of £4.9 million. The two sections of the bridge were built simultaneously from each bank and eventually met in the centre. It was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II on 6 November 1981, nine days before regular Metro service began.

Nocturne artwork

In 2006, Nexus, operators of the Metro, commissioned artist Nayan Kulkarni to install a huge artwork on the bridge. The artwork, Nocturne, sees the bridge painted two distinct tones of blue, while at night, 140 Lumiflood 36 LED lighting units create an ever-changing pattern of colours based on photographs submitted by members of the public.

Nocturne was completed and opened on 26 April 2007 and means that all five main bridges across the Tyne between Gateshead and Newcastle have unique lighting schemes.

References

Queen Elizabeth II Bridge, Newcastle upon Tyne Wikipedia