Lambley Viaduct

Lambley Viaduct
Lambley Viaduct
Coordinates 54°55′08″N 2°30′31″W / 54.9190°N 2.5085°W / 54.9190; -2.5085
OS grid reference NY675584
Carries
Crosses River South Tyne
Locale Northumberland
Heritage status Grade II* listed[1]
Preceded by Eals Footbridge
Followed by Lambley Footbridge
Characteristics
Material Stone
Total length 260 m (850 ft)
Width 3.5 m (11 ft)
Height At least 33 m (108 ft)
No. of spans 9
Piers in water 3
History
Designer Probably Sir George Barclay Bruce[1]
Construction end 1852
Opened 1852 (1852)
Closed 3 May 1976 (1976-05-03), as a railway
Lambley Viaduct
Location in Northumberland

Lambley Viaduct is a stone bridge across the River South Tyne at Lambley in Northumberland. Formerly a railway bridge, it remains open to pedestrians but one end of the viaduct has been fenced off.

History

A train crossing the viaduct in September 1973

Lambley viaduct crosses the River South Tyne as a series of elegant stone arches. More than 260 m (850 ft) long, it once carried the Haltwhistle to Alston railway. The railway, which was opened in 1852 to haul coal and lead from the Alston mines, closed in 1976, and the viaduct allowed to decay.[2] In 1991 the British Rail Property Board agreed to repair the viaduct and hand it over to the North Pennine Heritage Trust who would maintain it in the future; however the Trust went into administration in 2011.[3]

The viaduct was probably designed by George Barclay Bruce,[1] an eminent Victorian engineer who was involved in the Alston line before leaving for India to pioneer railway construction there. It is a particularly elegant example of Victorian engineering: the river is crossed by nine 17-metre (56 ft) wide arches which support a deck at least 33 m (108 ft) above the river[1] but, as it carried a single rail track, only 3.5 m (11 ft) wide. The piers to the arches are built of massive rough-faced stones each weighing up to 500 kilograms (1,100 lb), with similar-sized stones in ashlar to the main arch voussoirs. The spandrels and piers to the 6-metre (20 ft) wide approach arches are built of coursed rubble masonry. One end of the viaduct has been fenced off to stop people straying into Lambley railway station which is now a private house.[4]

It is a Grade II* listed structure.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Historic England, "Railway Viaduct Across River South Tyne  (Grade II*) (1042918)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 5 September 2018
  2. "River South Tyne - Lambley Viaduct". Bridges on the Tyne. Retrieved 21 January 2016.
  3. "North Pennines Heritage Trust collapses". The Journal. Newcastle upon Tyne: Trinity Mirror. 10 September 2011. Retrieved 21 January 2016. The trust, with 400 members and a team of volunteers, also owns Alston Arches and the Lambley Viaduct at Haltwhistle.
  4. "Lambley Viaduct". Blacket-Ord Consulting Engineers. Archived from the original on 7 November 2002. Retrieved 4 December 2008.
Next bridge upstream River South Tyne Next bridge downstream
Eals Footbridge
Footbridge 
Lambley Viaduct
Grid reference: NY675584
Lambley Footbridge
Footbridge 
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