City Union Bridge

From Wikishire
Revision as of 18:52, 18 October 2020 by RB (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox bridge |name=City Union Bridge |county=Lanarkshire |picture=City Union Bridge, Glasgow, 2018-06-30.jpg |picture caption=The City Union Railway Bridge |os grid ref=NS...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
City Union Bridge
Lanarkshire

The City Union Railway Bridge
Location
Carrying: Railway
Crossing: River Clyde
Location
Grid reference: NS59296451
Location: 55°51’12"N, 4°14’57"W
Structure
History
Information

The City Union Bridge is a railway bridge across the River Clyde in Glasgow, Lanarkshire. It was opened in 1899.[1] The bridge was once busy on a main railway route in and out of St Enoch Station but that terminus closed in 1966 and was demolished in 1977, and since then the bridge is only used for empty stock movements, as the bridge forms a key link between Glasgow Queen Street and Glasgow Central. If a project known as Glasgow Crossrail goes ahead then the bridge and associated track will see passenger services once more.

The City of Glasgow Union Railway built the first railway bridge over the River Clyde in the City of Glasgow here, which opened in 1870. It consisted of twin-lattice parallel iron girders in seven spans; the engineers were John Fowler and J F Blair, and the contractor was Thomas Brassey & co. Deep foundations to the piers required—up to 100 feet (30 m)—and cylinder caissons were lowered to firm rock by the use of a grab type excavator working within; the excavated face was kept under water.

In 1898 the bridge was completely rebuilt, and widened for quadruple track; compressed air excavation for 13-foot diameter steel piers were used. The structure consists of two variable depth continuous girders. The visible spandrel braced arches are not primary structural members. There is a decorative cast-iron cornice and parapet, and towers and half turrets in red sandstone. The work cost £67,970.[2] The engineer was William Melville, this time for the Glasgow and South-Western Railway Company, and the contractors were Morrison and Mason for the foundations, and Sir William Arrol & Co for the steelwork.[3]

The bridge is a Category B listed building.[4]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about City Union Bridge)

References

  1. Glasgow City Council: City Union Railway Bridge
  2. Roland Paxton and Jim Shipway, Civil Engineering Heritage: Scotland, Lowlands and Borders, Thomas Telford Limited, London, 2008, ISBN 978 0 7277 3487 7
  3. Union Bridge, Glasgow: ictorianweb.org
  4. City Union Bridge (Category B) - Listing detail (Historic Environment Scotland)


Bridges and crossings on the River Clyde
Glasgow Bridge South Portland Street Suspension Bridge Victoria Bridge City Union Bridge Albert Bridge St Andrew's Suspension Bridge King's Bridge