Winthorpe Bridge
Winthorpe Bridge | |
---|---|
![]() View in September 2012 | |
Coordinates | 53°06′N 0°48′W / 53.10°N 0.80°W |
OS grid reference | SK805567 |
Carries | A1 |
Crosses | River Trent |
Locale | Winthorpe, Nottinghamshire, England |
Maintained by | National Highways |
Heritage status | Grade II* listed[1] |
Characteristics | |
Material | Reinforced concrete |
Total length | 520 ft (160 m) |
Width | 82 ft (25 m) |
Longest span | 260 ft (79 m) |
History | |
Constructed by | Christiani & Nielsen |
Construction start | March 1962 |
Construction cost | £465,695 |
Opened | 27 July 1964 |
Statistics | |
Daily traffic | A1 dual carriageway on the Newark bypass |
Location | |
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Winthorpe Bridge is a concrete box girder bridge, carrying the A1 road over the River Trent in Winthorpe, Nottinghamshire, England.
History
[edit]The contracts for the bridge were awarded on 20 March 1962 for £495,695, and construction began on 16 July that year. The 6-mile (9.7 km) bypass was to cost £3,250,000. It was opened on 27 July 1964, by Ernest Marples.
The bridge was constructed by the Danish bridge-builder Christiani & Nielsen.[2] Another Danish civil engineering company Bierrum built the nearby cooling towers, along the River Trent to the north. The Newark bypass was built by Robert McGregor & Sons who would have laid the concrete pavement on the bridge. The north-bound surface had the concrete pavement laid in forty days, with three concrete-batching sites along the bypass preparing the concrete.
The bridge was Grade II* listed on 29 May 1998.[1]
Structure
[edit]The bridge crosses the River Trent in Winthorpe, Nottinghamshire, which is the third-longest river in England, at 185 miles (298 km).[3] It is a reinforced-concrete bridge made out of nine box girders.[4]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Historic England. "Winthorpe Bridge carrying bypass over River Trent (1323680)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 9 February 2017.
- ^ "The A1 By-Pass". Winthorpe with Langford Parish Council. Retrieved 19 January 2025.
- ^ "Walking the length of the river Trent via the Trent Valley Way". Trent Rivers Trust. 18 June 2024. Retrieved 16 July 2025.
- ^ "Listed Building: Winthorpe Bridge carrying bypass over River Trent (3.88.30)". Nottinghamshire Historic Environment Record. Nottinghamshire County Council. Retrieved 16 July 2025.
- Modern British bridges, 1 January 1965, Dorothy Henry, ISBN 0853340587