Glebe Island Bridge

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Glebe Island Bridge

Glebe Island Bridge in a permanently open position
Carries Bank Street
Crosses Rozelle Bay
Locale Rozelle - Pyrmont, New South Wales,  Australia
Maintained by Roads and Maritime Services
Designer Percy Allan
Design Swing bridge
Material Steel
Total length 107.6 metres (353 ft)
Longest span 29.1 metres (95 ft)
Number of spans 24.7, 29.1, 29.1 and 24.7 m
Construction end 1903
Preceded by timber bridge (1862 – 1903)
Heritage status Australian Heritage Database (ID 15949)
Closed 1995
The original Glebe Island Bridge in 1872

The Glebe Island Bridge is an unused swing bridge over Rozelle Bay in Port Jackson in Sydney, Australia. The bridge, which in the past connected Rozelle to Pyrmont by road, is one of the last remaining swing bridges of its type in Australia and in the world.

The Glebe Island Bridge was an electrically operated swing bridge opened in 1903, the year after the opening of the new Pyrmont Bridge over Sydney's Darling Harbour, which has a similar design. The bridge was designed by Percy Allan of the New South Wales Public Works Department who also designed the Pyrmont Bridge. During normal operation the two 29.1m swing spans rotated about a central vertical axis.

The bridge was closed in 1995, when the adjacent Anzac Bridge opened, and remains in a permanently open position with no access to pedestrians or vehicular traffic. The bridge was operated and used for access by cyclists in the annual Spring Cycle in October until 2008.

The bridge is listed on the Australian Heritage Database since 1989.

A 2009 structural assessment found the bridge in "very poor condition" and in April 2013 a new report found that it had deteriorated further.

City of Sydney Council and the community groups lobby the state government to restore the structure and reopen the bridge for pedestrian and cyclists.[1]

A cost benefit report by ACIL Allen consultants for Transport for NSW on options for the bridge was released in September 2013.

See also

References

  1. Nicole Hasham (April 3, 2013). "Glebe Island Bridge is rotting away". The Sydney Morning Herald (Fairfax Media). Retrieved 7 June 2013. 

External links

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