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Scotswood Bridge

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Carries
  
Road Path

Locale
  
Tyne and Wear, England

Clearance above
  
7.6 m (25 ft)

Total length
  
139 m

Bridge type
  
Through arch bridge

Crosses
  
River Tyne

Width
  
20.13 m (66.0 ft)

Opened
  
20 March 1967

Body of water
  
River Tyne

Architecture firm
  
Mott, Hay and Anderson

Scotswood Bridge photos1bloggercomblogger18542751600060126

Design
  
Steel through arch with suspended box girder deck.

Location
  
Blaydon-on-Tyne, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear

Similar
  
River Tyne, Blaydon Bridge, Newburn Bridge, Redheugh Bridge, Bywell Bridge

Scotswood Bridge is one of the main bridges crossing the River Tyne in North East England. It links the west end of Newcastle upon Tyne on the north bank of the river with the MetroCentre and Blaydon in Gateshead on the south bank. It is situated 5.2 km (3.2 mi) upstream of the better known city centre bridges.

Contents

Scotswood Bridge Photographs Of Newcastle Scotswood Bridge

The Chain Bridge

Scotswood Bridge Photographs Of Newcastle Scotswood Bridge

The first bridge across the river at this location was the Old Scotswood Bridge, or "The Chain Bridge" as it was known locally. It was a suspension bridge with two stone towers, from which the road deck was suspended by chains. It was passed by parliament in 1829 and designed by John Green, with construction beginning that year. When it was opened on 16 April 1831 it was the first bridge over the River Tyne to be opened during Tyneside's industrial era.

Scotswood Bridge Scotswood Bridge Wikipedia

The bridge was freed from tolls in 1907. In 1931 the bridge needed to be strengthened and widened. The width was increased from 17 ft (5.2 m) to 19.5 ft (5.9 m) with two 6 ft (1.8 m) footpaths. The suspension cables and decking were also strengthened, allowing the weight limit to be raised to 10 tonnes (9.842 long tons; 11.02 short tons). The bridge eventually proved too narrow for the traffic it needed to carry and its increasing repair costs proved too much. After standing for 136 years, it was closed and demolished in 1967 after its replacement had been completed.

The Current Bridge

Scotswood Bridge Scotswood Bridge

A replacement for the Chain Bridge had been proposed as early as 1941. Permission was finally granted in 1960. A new bridge was designed by Mott, Hay and Anderson and built by Mitchell Construction and Dorman Long. Construction commenced on 18 September 1964. It was built slightly to the west of the Chain Bridge, which continued operating during the new bridge's construction. The bridge was opened on 20 March 1967. It is a box girder bridge, supported by two piers in the river and carries a dual carriageway road. Combined costs for demolition of the old bridge and construction of the new one were £2.5 million.

Scotswood Bridge Hadrian39s Cycleway Scotswood Bridge

Scotswood Bridge carried the traffic of the Gateshead A69 western by-pass from 1970 up until the construction of Blaydon Bridge and the new A1 in 1990. Between June 1971 and January 1974 traffic on the bridge was limited to single file to enable strengthening work to take place, which was needed to address design concerns. It has required further strengthening and repairs a number of times since; between 1979 and 1980, in 1983 and in 1990.

Scotswood Bridge Photographs Of Newcastle Scotswood Bridge

References

Scotswood Bridge Wikipedia


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