Queen Elizabeth Bridge, British Virgin Islands: Difference between revisions
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==Tolls== | ==Tolls== | ||
Until June 2004 the bridge was a toll bridge. After that date it was made free of charge. Before that, Government accounts regularly showed that the tolls cost more to collect than the revenue that they raised, although the toll was popular with tourists, as the toll collector used a half coconut shell nailed to a plank of wood to collect the 25¢ (later 50¢) toll. The government had considered installing an automatic toll booth, but it would have cost $400,000. | Until June 2004 the bridge was a toll bridge. After that date it was made free of charge. Before that, Government accounts regularly showed that the tolls cost more to collect than the revenue that they raised, although the toll was popular with tourists, as the toll collector used a half coconut shell nailed to a plank of wood to collect the 25¢ (later 50¢) toll. The government had considered installing an automatic toll booth, but it would have cost $400,000. | ||
==Outside links== | ==Outside links== |
Latest revision as of 17:51, 4 April 2018
The Queen Elizabeth II Bridge, sometimes called the Beef Island Bridge, is a bridge, 230 feet long which links Beef Island with Tortola in the British Virgin Islands. The original bridge was opened in 1966, and was replaced by a new bridge in 2003.[1]
The First Bridge
The first Queen Elizabeth II Bridge was opened in February 1966 by The Queen in person. The bridge was of steel and stone construction and had a single lane. It was a lifting bridge, permitting boats to pass through.
The bridge proved its worth over the years. However it became inadequate to the traffic after the extension of Terrance B. Lettsome International Airport and the upgrading of the Road Town/Cane Garden Bay road and the Road Town/West End road: motorists were often aggravated by having to wait in turn to pass on this single lane bridge, and it was becoming increasingly congested.
A new bridge was required, which was constructed between 2001 and 2002, and was dedicated by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II once more. The bridge is of steel and reinforced concrete construction, and is higher and almost twice as wide as the older bridge. It is able to take large trucks and heavy goods vehicles and has two lanes, compared to the single lane of the old bridge. The bridge has come in line with the increased traffic in the area thanks to the increase in tourism of the British Virgin Islands. The bridge is illuminated at night.
Controversies
Construction cost
The construction of the new bridge was surrounded by controversy from a relatively early stage. A construction company from Santo Domingo won the tender to build the new bridge, but then ceased work when the bridge was three quarters finished claiming that the tender specifications were inaccurate. Unsubstantiated allegations were circulated about links between the construction company and members of the ruling Virgin Islands Party. After arbitration proceedings between the contractors and the British Virgin Islands government, a revised price was agreed, and the final cost of the bridge was approximately US$6.73 million, for a bridge just over 230 feet long over a shallow strait. Various (unsourced) claims have been advanced from time to time that the bridge is meter for meter and foot for foot the most expensive in the world.[2]
In 2003 the Government agreed to pay a further US$115,000 to demolish the old bridge.
Yacht racing
The Royal BVI Yacht Club sponsors an annual "round Tortola" yacht race. The event became slightly infamous when in the 1970s the Territory's resident surgeon, Robin Tattersall, persuaded the bridge operators to lift the old bridge enabling him to avoid circumnavigating Beef Island as well. Unfortunately the bridge got stuck and could not be reopened for two days, cutting off the airport. Since that date, the race instructions have stipulated that racers must have Beef Island to port to ensure both islands are circumnavigated. The new bridge cannot now be raised in any case (it is solid concrete), but the race rules still remain the same in any event.
Tolls
Until June 2004 the bridge was a toll bridge. After that date it was made free of charge. Before that, Government accounts regularly showed that the tolls cost more to collect than the revenue that they raised, although the toll was popular with tourists, as the toll collector used a half coconut shell nailed to a plank of wood to collect the 25¢ (later 50¢) toll. The government had considered installing an automatic toll booth, but it would have cost $400,000.
Outside links
- Location map: 18°26’40"N, 64°33’14"W
- VIP newsletter - November 1999
References
- ↑ "Queen Elizabeth II Bridge". Structurae.com. https://structurae.net/structures/queen-elizabeth-ii-bridge-2002. Retrieved 16 November 2016.
- ↑ "Bloggers attacking me – Christopher wants inquiry into his bridge-building action". BVI News. 12 August 2014. http://bvinews.com/new/bloggers-attacking-me-christopher-wants-inquiry-into-his-bridge-building-action/. Retrieved 5 October 2017. "former Minister of Works Alvin Christopher said bloggers have been wrongfully claiming that the most expensive bridge in the world was built under his watch."