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Blackfriars Railway Bridge
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackfriars_Railway_Bridge
So why have the supports of the old bridge been left behind? SteveTBM -- ======================================== In dentibus anticis frustum magnum spiniciae habes |
Blackfriars Railway Bridge
"SteveTBM®" wrote in message .uk... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackfriars_Railway_Bridge So why have the supports of the old bridge been left behind? SteveTBM -- In case they were needed for future railway development? In fact the easternmost piers are going to be used for the Blackfriars station widening work duringThameslink 20?? Another possibility is that if they were in good nick, they may have been left to provide part of the upstream 'cu****er' for the current bridge's piers. A civil engineer might be able to confirm that, I shoud think one will be along anytime... Paul |
Blackfriars Railway Bridge
SteveTBM® wrote:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackfriars_Railway_Bridge So why have the supports of the old bridge been left behind? Because if they'd got rid of them, someone would have asked why they got rid of them. |
Blackfriars Railway Bridge
In message , SteveTBM®
writes http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackfriars_Railway_Bridge So why have the supports of the old bridge been left behind? I wonder if it was because the bridge was so close to the adjacent St Paul's bridge that removing the piers might have destabilised the foundations of the latter. -- Paul Terry |
Blackfriars Railway Bridge
SteveTBM® wrote:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackfriars_Railway_Bridge So why have the supports of the old bridge been left behind? The bridge was of cast-iron construction and would have had scrap value. The masonry supports had no value and, presumably, there was no funding at the time to remove them for aesthetic reasons. However, I like ruins like this and hope they will stay as they are. |
Blackfriars Railway Bridge
"umpston" wrote in message oups.com... SteveTBM® wrote: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackfriars_Railway_Bridge So why have the supports of the old bridge been left behind? The bridge was of cast-iron construction and would have had scrap value. The masonry supports had no value and, presumably, there was no funding at the time to remove them for aesthetic reasons. However, I like ruins like this and hope they will stay as they are. See my other post, the easternmost piers are to be used by the new Blackfriars station, so must be in reasonable condition - IIRC the tops are properly capped off to waterproof them as well. Paul |
Blackfriars Railway Bridge
Paul Scott wrote: "umpston" wrote in message oups.com... SteveTBM® wrote: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackfriars_Railway_Bridge So why have the supports of the old bridge been left behind? The bridge was of cast-iron construction and would have had scrap value. The masonry supports had no value and, presumably, there was no funding at the time to remove them for aesthetic reasons. However, I like ruins like this and hope they will stay as they are. See my other post, the easternmost piers are to be used by the new Blackfriars station, so must be in reasonable condition - IIRC the tops are properly capped off to waterproof them as well. Paul I'm probably getting mixed up with something else, I think there were plans to have sculptures on the top of each support - sounds awful! I heard that in a pub somewhere... B. |
Blackfriars Railway Bridge
"Martin Underwood" a@b wrote in message ... So why have the supports of the old bridge been left behind? The bridge was of cast-iron construction and would have had scrap value. The masonry supports had no value and, presumably, there was no funding at the time to remove them for aesthetic reasons. However, I like ruins like this and hope they will stay as they are. See my other post, the easternmost piers are to be used by the new Blackfriars station, so must be in reasonable condition - IIRC the tops are properly capped off to waterproof them as well. Paul Before the old part of the bridge was demoloished, was the station wider (ie did it extend west towards the road bridge) or did the extra tracks merge into the existing ones just south of the roofed section? Likewise on the south bank, did the tracks merge into the existing ones before the start of the long north-south building, or was that built after the bridge was demolished? The new bridge was built 20 years after the older bridge (1862) , to provide space for additional tracks, the older bridge went out of use when heavier trains became the norm in the 1950s, but the deck wasn't removed until 1984. Paul |
Blackfriars Railway Bridge
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