Constantius Bridge
Constantius Bridge | |
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Coordinates | 54°59′02″N 2°07′26″W / 54.984°N 2.124°WCoordinates: 54°59′02″N 2°07′26″W / 54.984°N 2.124°W |
Carries | Road |
Crosses | River Tyne |
Locale | Northumberland, England |
Characteristics | |
Design | beam |
Material | concrete |
Number of spans | three |
Piers in water | two |
History | |
Construction end | 1976 [1] |
Statistics | |
Daily traffic | Dual carriageway |
Toll | No |
Constantius Bridge |
Constantius Bridge is a modern concrete bridge across the River Tyne about 1 mile (2 km) west of Hexham, Northumberland, England. The bridge carries the A69 road over the River Tyne and forms part of the Hexham bypass.
History
In 1976 a new road was built to replace the old A69 through Hexham, and Hexham was by-passed on the north side of the river, necessitating a bridge crossing near Warden just west of Hexham.[1] The bridge crosses the River Tyne just down stream from the "Meeting of the Waters" - the point where the North and South Tyne rivers join to form the main River Tyne,[2] then crosses the railway to continue towards Haydon Bridge.[1]
On 30 August 1975, during construction, there was a flood and the scaffolding and shuttering for the westernmost span collapsed. The completed bridge has already required strengthening due to flood damage, showing that the Tyne has lost none of its capability for attacking bridge structures.[1]
References
- 1 2 3 4 "bridgesonthetyne". Retrieved 2009-05-30.
- ↑ "Hadrian’s cycleway". Retrieved 2009-06-05.
External links
Next crossing upstream | River Tyne | Next crossing downstream |
Warden Railway Bridge (River South Tyne) Chesters Bridge |
Constantius Bridge Grid reference: NY921654 |
Border Counties Bridge (ruined railway bridge) |
Next road crossing upstream | River Tyne | Next road crossing downstream |
Warden Bridge (River South Tyne) Chollerford Bridge |
Constantius Bridge Grid reference: NY921654 |
Hexham Bridge |