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[[File:Severn Bridge near to Beachley-cropped.jpg|thumb|right|300px|The Severn Bridge]]
[[File:Severn Bridge near to Beachley-cropped.jpg|thumb|right|300px|The Severn Bridge]]
{{county|Gloucestershire}}
The '''Severn Bridge''' is a motorway suspension bridge spanning the [[River Severn]] between Aust and Beachley in [[Gloucestershire]]. There is however no junction at Beachley and the motorway continues onto the Wye Bridge which crosses the [[River Wye]] into [[Monmouthshire]]. Now classified as the M48, it was originally built as part of the [[M4 motorway|M4]] between [[London]] and [[Newport, Monmouthshire|Newport]] and took three and half years<ref>{{cite web|title=Highways Agency|url=http://www.highways.gov.uk/our-road-network/managing-our-roads/operating-our-network/how-we-manage-our-roads/area-teams/area-2/the-severn-bridges/the-severn-crossing-facts-and-figures/}}</ref>  to construct at a cost of £8 million.<ref>{{cite web | title=Construction cost | work= M48 Severn Bridge - Closures to Install Cable Drying | url= http://www.pr-usa.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=70347&Itemid=9 | accessdate=2008-05-12}}</ref>  It replaced the Aust ferry.
The '''Severn Bridge''' is a motorway suspension bridge spanning the [[River Severn]] between Aust and Beachley in [[Gloucestershire]]. There is however no junction at Beachley and the motorway continues onto the Wye Bridge which crosses the [[River Wye]] into [[Monmouthshire]]. Now classified as the M48, it was originally built as part of the [[M4 motorway|M4]] between [[London]] and [[Newport, Monmouthshire|Newport]] and took three and half years<ref>{{cite web|title=Highways Agency|url=http://www.highways.gov.uk/our-road-network/managing-our-roads/operating-our-network/how-we-manage-our-roads/area-teams/area-2/the-severn-bridges/the-severn-crossing-facts-and-figures/}}</ref>  to construct at a cost of £8 million.<ref>{{cite web | title=Construction cost | work= M48 Severn Bridge - Closures to Install Cable Drying | url= http://www.pr-usa.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=70347&Itemid=9 | accessdate=2008-05-12}}</ref>  It replaced the Aust ferry.


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The first proposal for a bridge across the Severn, approximately in the same location as that eventually constructed, was in 1824 by Thomas Telford, who had been asked to advise on how to improve mail coach services between London and South Wales.  No action was taken, and over the next few decades the railways became the dominant mode of long-distance travel, with the Severn Railway Bridge at [[Sharpness]] being opened in 1879 and the main line [[Severn Tunnel]] in 1886. However, the growth of road traffic in the early 20th century led to further calls for improvements, and in the early 1920s [[Chepstow]] Urban District Council convened a meeting of neighbouring local authorities to consider a Severn crossing to ease congestion and delays on the A48 passing through the town. In 1935 Gloucestershire and Monmouthshire County Councils jointly promoted a Parliamentary Bill to obtain powers to build the bridge over the estuary, with 75% of costs to be met by the Ministry of Transport from the Road Fund. However, the Bill was rejected by Parliament after opposition from the Great Western Railway Company.<ref>[http://www.iht.org/motorway/m4wales.htm IHT site - M4 in Wales]</ref>
The first proposal for a bridge across the Severn, approximately in the same location as that eventually constructed, was in 1824 by Thomas Telford, who had been asked to advise on how to improve mail coach services between London and South Wales.  No action was taken, and over the next few decades the railways became the dominant mode of long-distance travel, with the Severn Railway Bridge at [[Sharpness]] being opened in 1879 and the main line [[Severn Tunnel]] in 1886. However, the growth of road traffic in the early 20th century led to further calls for improvements, and in the early 1920s [[Chepstow]] Urban District Council convened a meeting of neighbouring local authorities to consider a Severn crossing to ease congestion and delays on the A48 passing through the town. In 1935 Gloucestershire and Monmouthshire County Councils jointly promoted a Parliamentary Bill to obtain powers to build the bridge over the estuary, with 75% of costs to be met by the Ministry of Transport from the Road Fund. However, the Bill was rejected by Parliament after opposition from the Great Western Railway Company.<ref>[http://www.iht.org/motorway/m4wales.htm IHT site - M4 in Wales]</ref>
[[File:Severn Bridge plaque - geograph.org.uk - 930373.jpg|left|thumb|150px|Plaque to commemorate the men who lost their lives in building the bridge]]
[[File:Severn Bridge plaque - geograph.org.uk - 930373.jpg|left|thumb|150px|Plaque to commemorate the men who lost their lives in building the bridge]]
[[File:Monument to the Severn Bridge - geograph.org.uk - 1743473.jpg|thumb|right|Monument showing the architects and constructors etc of the bridge]]
[[File:Monument to the Severn Bridge - geograph.org.uk - 1743473.jpg|thumb|right|Monument showing the architects and constructors etc. of the bridge]]


After World War II, plans began to be made for a nationally-funded network of trunk roads, including a Severn Bridge, for which the contract was awarded to Mott, Hay and Anderson, with Freeman Fox and Partners. The public inquiry into the scheme was held on 24 September 1946 at Bristol University.<ref name=Autocar196609>{{cite journal | authorlink = Stuart Bladon (Maurice A Smith  - Ed) |title = Bridge over the River Severn | series = 125| journal = Autocar | volume =  nbr 3681| pages = pages 474–478| date = 2 September 1966}}</ref>  However, because Government funding was prioritised for the similar [[Forth Road Bridge]] (opened in 1964), construction of the Severn Bridge was not started until 1961:  the UK government announced in 1962 that construction costs would be 'recovered' by means of a toll of 2s 6d (GBP 0.125) on all vehicle crossings, though walking or cycling across the bridge would be charge-free.<ref name=Autocar196609/> The substructure was completed by contractors John Howard and Co. in 1963. The superstructure contract was awarded to Associated Bridge Builders Ltd (a joint venture of Sir William Arrol & Co., Cleveland Bridge & Engineering Company and Dorman Long) in 1963, and completed in 1966.<ref name=iht>[http://www.iht.org/motorway/m4severn.htm IHT site - Severn Bridge]</ref>
After World War II, plans began to be made for a nationally-funded network of trunk roads, including a Severn Bridge, for which the contract was awarded to Mott, Hay and Anderson, with Freeman Fox and Partners. The public inquiry into the scheme was held on 24 September 1946 at Bristol University.<ref name=Autocar196609>{{cite journal | authorlink = Stuart Bladon (Maurice A Smith  - Ed) |title = Bridge over the River Severn | series = 125| journal = Autocar | volume =  nbr 3681| pages = pages 474–478| date = 2 September 1966}}</ref>  However, because Government funding was prioritised for the similar [[Forth Road Bridge]] (opened in 1964), construction of the Severn Bridge was not started until 1961:  the UK government announced in 1962 that construction costs would be 'recovered' by means of a toll of 2s 6d on all vehicle crossings, though walking or cycling across the bridge would be charge-free.<ref name=Autocar196609/> The substructure was completed by contractors John Howard and Co. in 1963. The superstructure contract was awarded to Associated Bridge Builders Ltd (a joint venture of Sir William Arrol & Co., Cleveland Bridge & Engineering Company and Dorman Long) in 1963, and completed in 1966.<ref name=iht>[http://www.iht.org/motorway/m4severn.htm IHT site - Severn Bridge]</ref> The tolls were removed on 17 December 2018.<ref>{{cite news | title = Severn tolls to be axed earlier than planned on 17 December | publisher = BBC News Online | date = 2 October 2018 | url = https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-45467656 | accessdate = 2 October 2018}}</ref>


== Component structures ==
== Component structures ==
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=== Severn Bridge ===
=== Severn Bridge ===
The Severn Bridge is located close to the former Aust Ferry. The bridge is a suspension bridge of conventional design, with the deck supported by two main cables slung between two steel towers. In 1966 the cables supporting the bridge deck were spun from 18,000 miles of wire.<ref name=Autocar196609/> The main cables, are each made up of 8,322 individual 5mm wires.<ref>{{cite web|title=Highways Agency|url=http://www.highways.gov.uk/our-road-network/managing-our-roads/operating-our-network/how-we-manage-our-roads/area-teams/area-2/the-severn-bridges/the-severn-crossing-cable-investigations/}}</ref> An unusual feature of the suspension cables carrying the deck is that they are not vertical, as for most suspension bridges, but rather arranged in a zig-zag fashion, with adjacent mounts closely spaced. The triangulation this offers is an attempt to reduce vibration, as is the prominent use of Stockbridge dampers on the cables. The bridge is 5,240 ft long, consisting of a 3,240-ft central span between the towers and the two 1000-ft side spans. The towers rise to 445 ft above mean high water and are of hollow box construction.<ref>{{cite web|title=Severn Bridge|url=http://www.severnbridge.co.uk/history_sb.shtml}}</ref> The deck is an orthotropic steel box girder of aerofoil shape with cantilevered cycle tracks and footway supported from the box. The shape of the bridge was determined by the designers Freeman, Fox and Partners following wind tunnel tests for the [[Forth Road Bridge]], after the original wind tunnel model was accidentally destroyed. The sections of the deck were built at Fairfield-Mabey in [[Chepstow]], and each 132-ton section was then floated down the river before being hoisted into position.
The Severn Bridge is located close to the former Aust Ferry. The bridge is a suspension bridge of conventional design, with the deck supported by two main cables slung between two steel towers. In 1966 the cables supporting the bridge deck were spun from 18,000 miles of wire.<ref name=Autocar196609/> The main cables, are each made up of 8,322 individual 5mm wires.<ref>{{cite web|title=Highways Agency|url=http://www.highways.gov.uk/our-road-network/managing-our-roads/operating-our-network/how-we-manage-our-roads/area-teams/area-2/the-severn-bridges/the-severn-crossing-cable-investigations/}}</ref> An unusual feature of the suspension cables carrying the deck is that they are not vertical, as for most suspension bridges, but rather arranged in a zig-zag fashion, with adjacent mounts closely spaced. The triangulation this offers is an attempt to reduce vibration, as is the prominent use of Stockbridge dampers on the cables. The bridge is 5,240&nbsp;ft long, consisting of a 3,240-ft central span between the towers and the two 1000-ft side spans. The towers rise to 445&nbsp;ft above mean high water and are of hollow box construction.<ref>{{cite web|title=Severn Bridge|url=http://www.severnbridge.co.uk/history_sb.shtml}}</ref> The deck is an orthotropic steel box girder of aerofoil shape with cantilevered cycle tracks and footway supported from the box. The shape of the bridge was determined by the designers Freeman, Fox and Partners following wind tunnel tests for the [[Forth Road Bridge]], after the original wind tunnel model was accidentally destroyed. The sections of the deck were built at Fairfield-Mabey in [[Chepstow]], and each 132-ton section was then floated down the river before being hoisted into position.


=== Beachley Viaduct ===
=== Beachley Viaduct ===
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The Wye Bridge is a 1,340-ft-long cable-stayed bridge, which crosses the border marked by the [[River Wye]] between Gloucestershire and Monmouthshire, two miles south of [[Chepstow]] in the latter county.  It consists of a single large cable stayed section with two single-leg pylons supporting the bridge deck from the centre of the roadway.  The deck is an orthotropic box girder similar to the Severn Bridge but has a different appearance as it has two sets of cable stays on each of two towers. Originally there was only one set of cable stays but these were replaced during the strengthening works. The Wye Bridge was built by Cleveland Bridge & Engineering Company.<ref name=iht/>
The Wye Bridge is a 1,340-ft-long cable-stayed bridge, which crosses the border marked by the [[River Wye]] between Gloucestershire and Monmouthshire, two miles south of [[Chepstow]] in the latter county.  It consists of a single large cable stayed section with two single-leg pylons supporting the bridge deck from the centre of the roadway.  The deck is an orthotropic box girder similar to the Severn Bridge but has a different appearance as it has two sets of cable stays on each of two towers. Originally there was only one set of cable stays but these were replaced during the strengthening works. The Wye Bridge was built by Cleveland Bridge & Engineering Company.<ref name=iht/>
==References==
{{reflist}}


== Outside links ==
== Outside links ==
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*[http://www.cbrd.co.uk/motorway/m48/ Motorway Database: M48]
*[http://www.cbrd.co.uk/motorway/m48/ Motorway Database: M48]
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/bristol/webcams/camera.shtml?h=han&camid=43955&region=91&mapregion=bbc_west Severn Bridge traffic webcam]
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/bristol/webcams/camera.shtml?h=han&camid=43955&region=91&mapregion=bbc_west Severn Bridge traffic webcam]
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{Severn bridges}}


[[Category:Bridges across the River Severn]]
[[Category:Bridges across the River Severn]]
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[[Category:Bridges in Gloucestershire]]
[[Category:Bridges in Gloucestershire]]
[[Category:Bridges in Monmouthshire]]
[[Category:Bridges in Monmouthshire]]
[[Category:Chepstow]]

Latest revision as of 19:36, 16 August 2020

The Severn Bridge

The Severn Bridge is a motorway suspension bridge spanning the River Severn between Aust and Beachley in Gloucestershire. There is however no junction at Beachley and the motorway continues onto the Wye Bridge which crosses the River Wye into Monmouthshire. Now classified as the M48, it was originally built as part of the M4 between London and Newport and took three and half years[1] to construct at a cost of £8 million.[2] It replaced the Aust ferry.

The bridge was opened on 8 September 1966, by Queen Elizabeth II, who hailed it as the dawn of a new economic era for South Wales. The bridge was granted Grade I listed status on 26 November 1999.[3]

History

Construction of the Severn Bridge
Construction at Aust

The first proposal for a bridge across the Severn, approximately in the same location as that eventually constructed, was in 1824 by Thomas Telford, who had been asked to advise on how to improve mail coach services between London and South Wales. No action was taken, and over the next few decades the railways became the dominant mode of long-distance travel, with the Severn Railway Bridge at Sharpness being opened in 1879 and the main line Severn Tunnel in 1886. However, the growth of road traffic in the early 20th century led to further calls for improvements, and in the early 1920s Chepstow Urban District Council convened a meeting of neighbouring local authorities to consider a Severn crossing to ease congestion and delays on the A48 passing through the town. In 1935 Gloucestershire and Monmouthshire County Councils jointly promoted a Parliamentary Bill to obtain powers to build the bridge over the estuary, with 75% of costs to be met by the Ministry of Transport from the Road Fund. However, the Bill was rejected by Parliament after opposition from the Great Western Railway Company.[4]

Plaque to commemorate the men who lost their lives in building the bridge
Monument showing the architects and constructors etc. of the bridge

After World War II, plans began to be made for a nationally-funded network of trunk roads, including a Severn Bridge, for which the contract was awarded to Mott, Hay and Anderson, with Freeman Fox and Partners. The public inquiry into the scheme was held on 24 September 1946 at Bristol University.[5] However, because Government funding was prioritised for the similar Forth Road Bridge (opened in 1964), construction of the Severn Bridge was not started until 1961: the UK government announced in 1962 that construction costs would be 'recovered' by means of a toll of 2s 6d on all vehicle crossings, though walking or cycling across the bridge would be charge-free.[5] The substructure was completed by contractors John Howard and Co. in 1963. The superstructure contract was awarded to Associated Bridge Builders Ltd (a joint venture of Sir William Arrol & Co., Cleveland Bridge & Engineering Company and Dorman Long) in 1963, and completed in 1966.[6] The tolls were removed on 17 December 2018.[7]

Component structures

Aerial view (top left to bottom right) Aust Viaduct, Severn Bridge, Beachley Viaduct and Wye Bridge

The Severn Bridge crossing consists of four structures, which, listed in order from east to west, are: the Aust Viaduct, Severn Bridge, Beachley Viaduct and Wye Bridge. The Severn Bridge and Aust Viaduct was granted Grade I listed status on 26 November 1999,[3] while the Wye Bridge and Beachley Viaduct was granted Grade II listed status on 29 May 1998.[8]

Aust Viaduct

The 514-ft Aust Viaduct is a twin box girder structure with a concrete deck,[3] which carries the roadway from the top of Aust Cliff to the first gravity anchorage of the Severn Bridge. The roadway is then carried over the top of the concrete anchorage to the Severn Bridge.

Severn Bridge

The Severn Bridge is located close to the former Aust Ferry. The bridge is a suspension bridge of conventional design, with the deck supported by two main cables slung between two steel towers. In 1966 the cables supporting the bridge deck were spun from 18,000 miles of wire.[5] The main cables, are each made up of 8,322 individual 5mm wires.[9] An unusual feature of the suspension cables carrying the deck is that they are not vertical, as for most suspension bridges, but rather arranged in a zig-zag fashion, with adjacent mounts closely spaced. The triangulation this offers is an attempt to reduce vibration, as is the prominent use of Stockbridge dampers on the cables. The bridge is 5,240 ft long, consisting of a 3,240-ft central span between the towers and the two 1000-ft side spans. The towers rise to 445 ft above mean high water and are of hollow box construction.[10] The deck is an orthotropic steel box girder of aerofoil shape with cantilevered cycle tracks and footway supported from the box. The shape of the bridge was determined by the designers Freeman, Fox and Partners following wind tunnel tests for the Forth Road Bridge, after the original wind tunnel model was accidentally destroyed. The sections of the deck were built at Fairfield-Mabey in Chepstow, and each 132-ton section was then floated down the river before being hoisted into position.

Beachley Viaduct

Beachley Viaduct stretching over Beachley Barracks and the Wye Bridge in the background.

The 2,444-ft Beachley Viaduct is also of similar box girder construction as the Severn Bridge but is supported on steel trestles as it crosses the Beachley peninsula.[8] The peninsula contains an army camp, which the bridge crosses.

Wye Bridge

The Wye Bridge

The Wye Bridge is a 1,340-ft-long cable-stayed bridge, which crosses the border marked by the River Wye between Gloucestershire and Monmouthshire, two miles south of Chepstow in the latter county. It consists of a single large cable stayed section with two single-leg pylons supporting the bridge deck from the centre of the roadway. The deck is an orthotropic box girder similar to the Severn Bridge but has a different appearance as it has two sets of cable stays on each of two towers. Originally there was only one set of cable stays but these were replaced during the strengthening works. The Wye Bridge was built by Cleveland Bridge & Engineering Company.[6]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Bridge Severn Bridge)

References


Bridges and crossings on the River Severn
Severn Tunnel Aust Severn Powerline Crossing Aust Ferry Severn Bridge Severn-Wye Cable Tunnel Severn Railway Bridge Disused footbridge