Cannon Street Railway Bridge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coordinates: 51°30′30″N, 0°05′31″W

Cannon Street Railway Bridge
Cannon Street Railway Bridge
Carries Railway
Crosses River Thames
Locale London, England
Design Girder Bridge
Beginning date of construction 1863
Completion date 1866
Opening date 1866

Cannon Street Railway Bridge is a bridge in central London, crossing the River Thames. Downstream, the next bridge is London Bridge, and upstream Southwark Bridge. It carries trains over the river to Cannon Street station on the north bank. It was originally named Alexandra Bridge after Alexandra of Denmark who was the wife of the future King Edward VII.

The bridge was designed by John Hawkshaw and John Wolfe-Barry for the South Eastern Railway. It was opened in 1866 after three years of construction. In its original form, it carried the railway over the Thames on five spans standing on cast-iron Doric pillars. It was subsequently widened between 188693 by Francis Brady and extensively renovated between 197982, which resulted in many of its ornamental features being removed and the structure taking on an even more utilitarian appearance than before.

It was the scene of the Marchioness disaster in 1989.

[edit] References

[edit] External links