Cleddau Bridge
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Cleddau Bridge | |
---|---|
Carries | A477 traffic, pedestrians and bicycles |
Crosses | River Cleddau |
Locale | Pembrokeshire, West Wales |
Maintained by | Pembrokeshire County Council |
Design | Box girder |
Total length | 0.51 miles (0.82km) |
AADT | 10,905 |
Opening date | March 20 1975 |
Toll | 75p (Cars & vans) £1.50 (Heavy vehicles) |
The Cleddau Bridge on the A477 road spans the River Cleddau between Neyland and Pembroke Dock, Wales. Originally called the Milford Haven Bridge, it collapsed during construction due to design errors in box girder design in 1970 and became operational in 1975.
It is a toll bridge, with toll booths located on the Pembroke Dock side of the bridge. As of June 2007 the toll is £0.75 for cars & vans and £1.50 for buses and lorries over 2 tonnes.[1][2]
Despite the income from the tolls there is an excess in spending of about £600,000pa which lead to calls of the bridge being adopted by the Welsh Assembly and the tolls being scrapped.[2]
Contents |
[edit] History
Prior to the bridge, the river Cleddau divided Pembrokeshire into two halves. The towns of Pembroke Dock on the south side and Neyland on the south side were less than a mile apart across the water but a 28 mile journey was required to travel between them via. road. To overcome this, the County Council operated a ferry service connecting the two towns, with capacity for 24 vehicles and 250 pedestrians. A decision was taken in the 1960s to replace with ferry service with a bridge. Two bridges would be built, the main Cleddau Bridge covering the Cleddau river and smaller bridge to cross the Westfield Pill creek. Sir Alexander Gibb and Partners and Freeman Cox and Partners were appointed as joint consulting engineers and the contract to build the bridge was awarded to A.E. Farr Limited in September 1968 for £2.1 million.
The bridge was expected to be completed by March 1971, however on 2nd June 1970 a 70m cantilever being used to put one of the 150-ton sections into position collapsed on the Pembroke Dock-side of the estuary. Four workers died, and five were injured although there were no casualties to members of the public living locally. Construction was halted until October 1972. The Merrison Committee of Inquiry into the Design and Erection of Steel Box Girder Bridges concluded that the cause of the collapse was the inadequacy of the design of a pier support diaphragm, a diaphragm of half the designed thickness was used, but considered "the failure of site organisation between the parties as of more general significance".[3] The committee believed that the only relevant Code of Practice relating to the design of steel bridges in the UK was inadequate for applications such as the Cleddau Bridge, and they implemented Interim Design and Workmanship Rules. These rules lay the groundwork for a new British Standard covering box girder bridge design.[4] As of 2007, the collapse during construction is regarded as the last major bridge disaster in the UK.[5]
Construction was eventually finished, at a final cost of £11.83 million, and the bridge opened to traffic on the 20th March 1975. £7 million of the overspend was attributed to design changes made due to the Merrison Committee's recommendations. This was covered by a £3 million out-of-court settlement between the County Council and the consulting engineers and a £4 million interest-free loan from the Government that was repayable over 40 years.[6] 885,900 crossing were made during the bridge's first year in operation.[7]
[edit] Tolls
Year | Cars & vans | Heavy vehicles |
---|---|---|
1975 | 30p | 60p |
1979 | 35p | 70p |
1985 | 50p | £1.00 |
1993 | 75p | £1.50 |
The bridge is funded by tolls which are collected from traffic traveling in both directions on the Pembroke Dock side of the bridge. The present toll rates have been in place since 1993 and are currently 35p for motorcycles, 75p for cars and £1.50 for heavy vehicles. Car drivers may also buy books of 20 or 50 bridge tickets which reduces the cost to 60p per crossing. The toll booths only accept cash or the pre-purchased tickets. The current toll booths have been in place since September 2004, when barriers were introduced for the first time to reduce the amount of people driving off without paying.[8]
[edit] Closures
The county council may close the bridge depending on wind speed, wind direction and the weather forecast. Vehicles taller than 1.9m, bicycles and motorcycles are usually not permitted to cross the bridge when wind speeds exceed 50mph. The bridge is closed to all vehicles and pedestrians should wind speeds exceed 70mph. The council began recording the time the bridge was closed for in 2002 and as of 2006, the bridge was closed to high-sided vehicles for 238 hours and closed to all vehicles for approximately 36 hours.[9]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Pembrokeshire County Council: Cleddau Bridge Toll
- ^ a b Petition call to end bridge tolls bbc.co.uk 7 June 2007
- ^ Bridle, Ron; Porter, John (2002). The Motorway Achievement: Frontiers of Knowledge and Practice. Thomas Telford Ltd, 346-348. ISBN 978-0727731975.
- ^ Flint, A.R.. Steel Box Girder Bridges. Institution of Structural Engineers. Archived from the original on 2008-01-30. Retrieved on 2008-01-30.
- ^ "How safe are our bridges?", BBC News Online, British Broadcasting Corporation, 2007-08-03. Retrieved on 2008-01-30. "The last major bridge disaster in the UK was the collapse of Pembrokeshire's Cleddau Bridge during construction in 1970, killing four people."
- ^ Cleddau Bridge. Hansard (1994-12-08).
- ^ Cleddau Bridge. Pembrokeshire County Council. Archived from the original on 2008-01-30. Retrieved on 2008-01-30.
- ^ "Abuse plea over toll collectors", BBC News Online, British Broadcasting Corporation, 2004-09-03. Retrieved on 2008-01-30.
- ^ "Cleddau Bridge - get the Latest", Pembrokeshire County Council, 2007-03-09. Archived from the original on 2008-01-31.
[edit] External links
- Cleddau Bridge is at coordinates Coordinates: