Details, Explanation and Meaning About Royal Albert Bridge

Royal Albert Bridge Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

The Royal Albert Bridge (sometimes called the Brunel Bridge) spans the River Tamar between Plymouth, on the Devon bank and Saltash on the Cornish bank carrying the Great Western Main Line in and out of Cornwall.

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The bridge was designed from 1855 by Isambard Kingdom Brunel for the Cornwall Railway Company after Parliament rejected his original plan for a train ferry across the Hamoaze. The bridge consists of two main spans of 455 feet, 100 feet above mean high spring tide, plus seventeen much shorter approach spans. Opened by Prince Albert on May 2, 1859, it was completed the year of the great engineer's death.

The structure was the third in a series of three notable wrought iron bridges built in the period, and was influenced by the preceding two, both by Robert Stephenson. The two central sections of the bridge are novel adaptations of the design employed for the High Level Bridge across the River Tyne in Newcastle Upon Tyne, being spans composed of a tubular arch in compression; a suspension chain in tension and acting to hold in the bridge abuttments. Between these two chords are supporting cross bracing mambers and suspension members which trail beneath the suspension chain to carry the railway deck. The method of construction was similar to the Britannia Bridge across the Menai Straits in north Wales, in that the spans were constructed on land, then floated into position and raised. Unlike the Britannia, however, the central piers were built up in height three feet at a time, and the spans raised that distance, until the design height was achieved. (For the Britannia, the piers were built to full height, and then the span hoisted to design height.) The difficulty of its construction rates it as one of Brunel's great railway achievements.

A short distance to the north of Brunel's bridge, the Tamar is crossed by the Tamar Bridge carrying the A38, one of the three trunk roads connecting Cornwall.

Other bridge

This bridge is not to be confused with the Albert Bridge over the River Thames in London.

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