Tay Road Bridge
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The Tay Road Bridge, viewed with Dundee in the background. |
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Official name | Tay Road Bridge |
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Carries | Motor vehicles, cyclists and pedestrians 4 lanes of A92 |
Crosses | Tay River |
Locale | Dundee |
Maintained by | Tay Road Bridge Joint Board |
Design | William A Fairhurst |
Total length | 2,250m |
Opening date | August 18, 1966 |
Toll | 80p cars £1.40 buses £2.00 trucks |
Coordinates |
The Tay Road Bridge is an important road bridge in Scotland. It crosses the Firth of Tay from Newport-on-Tay in Fife to Dundee.
It is around 1.4 miles long (2,250 m), making it one of the longest bridges in Europe, and slopes gradually downward towards Dundee. It carries the A92 road across the Firth and takes traffic directly into the centre of Dundee, lying downstream of the Tay Rail Bridge.
Contents |
[edit] Construction
As part of the modernisation projects of the 1950s, a road bridge across the Tay had been mooted for several years, but little headway made. However, it was not until August 1958, when a traffic census and test borings were taken to locate the most suitable crossing for the bridge.
The bridge was designed by William A Fairhurst and construction began in March 1963 with the infilling of West Graving Dock, King William Dock and Earl Grey docks in Dundee. Construction also required the demolition of Dundee's Royal Arch where Queen Victoria entered the city on royal visit.
The bridge itself took 3½ years to build at a cost of approximately £6 million. Following the installation of the final 65ton girder on July 4, 1966, the completed bridge was officially opened by Queen Mother on August 18. A newsreel of this is available in the British Pathe web archive. For four days, many took advantage of the toll-free period to cross the bridge.
The crossing had previously been made by a ferry service from Newport to Craigie Pier.
[edit] Commemorative obelisk
A 50 foot (15 metre) tall obelisk stands at the Newport side, and a smaller at the Dundee side to commemorate Willie Logan, managing director of the company that constructed the bridge who was killed in a plane crash near Inverness, and five workers, who died during construction.
Both of these obelisks are designed as the piers of the bridge, each representing the height of the piers at that end of the bridge.
[edit] Tolls
The bridge was originally a bidirectional toll road with the original 1966 toll for motorcycles, cars and goods vehicles of 1/-, 2/6 and 10/-, respectively. Heavy fines were imposed on drivers who broke down on the bridge if they had run out of petrol. On June 1, 1991, one way tolls were introduced whereby only southbound traffic would be charged.
Since March 2006, the bridge is one of the two remaining toll bridges in Scotland, and the current (September 2006) tolling regime is:
Classification | Toll |
Motor Cycles with or without sidecar. | Exempt |
Cars, goods vehicles and tractors having a maximum weight not exceeding 3.5 tonnes. |
80p |
Vehicles being buses constructed or adapted to carry not more than 16 passengers. |
80p |
Vehicles being buses constructed or adapted to carry more than 16 passengers. |
£1.40 |
Goods vehicles and tractors having a maximum weight exceeding 3.5 tonnes. |
£2.00 |
The legislation enabling the levying of tolls has been renewed by Parliament (originally that of the UK but now the responsibility of the Scottish Executive) repeatedly, most recently on 1 March 2006, where the toll remained unchanged.[1]
[edit] Jif Lemon Tree
There used to be a tree adjacent to the bridge. Someone tied plastic Jif lemons onto the tree every spring and removed them in the winter. The tree was removed some time ago as it was too close to the bridge.
[edit] External links
[edit] References
- ^ BBC (March 1 2006). Bridge tolls shake-up announced.