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General Information

Beginning of works: End of 2017
Completion: August 2018
Status: in use

Project Type

Location

Location: , ,
Crosses:
  • Clyde River
Replaces: Polmadie Bridge (1955)
Coordinates: 55° 50' 33.15" N    4° 14' 7.15" W
Show coordinates on a map

Technical Information

Dimensions

abutments number 2

Materials

piers reinforced concrete
deck slab reinforced concrete
abutments reinforced concrete
girders steel

Excerpt from Wikipedia

The Polmadie Bridge is a footbridge that crosses the River Clyde, Glasgow, Scotland between Glasgow Green (the Flesher's Haugh area which is largely football pitches) to its north, and Oatlands (at the west side of Richmond Park) to its south.

History

The first version of a bridge at the site was wooden, constructed from 1899 and completed in 1901, opening on the same day (13 June) as the original version of the nearby King's Bridge. This structure was partly destroyed by fire in 1921 and rebuilt by Sir William Arrol & Co., closing in 1939.

The replacement bridge, being four feet (1.2 metres) narrower than its predecessor, was constructed in 1954–1955, made from prestressed concrete. It was closed by Glasgow City Council on 14 May 2015, for reasons of public safety. Press Reports dated 16 July 2015 indicated the bridge was to be demolished – leaving concrete piers, and allowing restrictions on the stretch of river to be removed. Work to remove the bridge deck, leaving the concrete piers in place, began in October 2015. Demolition took about five months, after which access to footpaths along the riverbanks was restored.

In their 2017/2018 budget announced 16 February 2017, Glasgow City Council listed plans to "Build a new cycle and footbridge between Oatlands and Glasgow Green – replacing the demolished Polmadie Bridge" as one of the key projects for the financial year. Construction of the new bridge began in late 2017, with the initial £1.3 million cost funded by the local authority augmented by an additional £500,000 from the sustainable transport charity Sustrans. By May 2018, the five 25-tonne beams comprising the base had been lifted into place using a large crane. The new bridge was completed and formally opened in August 2018.

Text imported from Wikipedia article "Polmadie Bridge" and modified on December 11, 2024 according to the CC-BY-SA 4.0 International license.

Participants

Currently there is no information available about persons or companies having participated in this project.

Relevant Web Sites

  • About this
    data sheet
  • Structure-ID
    20089869
  • Published on:
    05/12/2024
  • Last updated on:
    06/12/2024
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