Kylesku Bridge

Kylesku Bridge

Kylesku Bridge in June 2004
Coordinates 58°15′01″N 5°00′40″W / 58.2503°N 5.011°W / 58.2503; -5.011Coordinates: 58°15′01″N 5°00′40″W / 58.2503°N 5.011°W / 58.2503; -5.011
Carries A894, one footway
Crosses Loch a' Chàirn Bhàin (Caolas Cumhann)
Locale Kylestrome
Characteristics
Design Prestressed box girder
Material Concrete
Total length 276 metres (902 feet)
Longest span 79 metres
Number of spans 5
Clearance below 24 metres (78 feet)
History
Engineering design by Ove Arup
Construction begin August 1982
Construction cost £4 million
Opened July 1984
Inaugurated 8 August 1984
Replaces Kylesku and Kylestrome ferry
 Kylesku Bridge shown within highland
grid reference NC233330

The Kylesku Bridge is a distinctively curved concrete box girder bridge in north-west Scotland that crosses the Loch a' Chàirn Bhàin in Sutherland.

History

In June 1978 the Highland Regional Council asked Ove Arup & Partners Scotland to prepare a feasibility study for a bridge, in their capacity as consulting civil engineers, and was prepared by March 1979.[1]

Construction for the approach roads, costing £4 million, began in summer 1981. Construction of the bridge began in August 1982, with Morrison Construction and Lehane Mackenzie and Shand the chief contractors.[1]

It was constructed by building out the supporting legs and then lifting the central span, which had been constructed land and then moved onto a barge by rail and weighed 640 tonnes (630 long tons; 710 short tons), into place.[2][3]

The cost of the bridge was £4 million, although was earlier budgeted at £2.75 million. The bridge opened to traffic in July 1984, and was formally opened by the Queen on 8 August 1984.[1]

Geography

The water the bridge crosses is approximately 120 metres (390 ft) wide and up to 25 metres (82 ft) deep, leading to fast tidal currents.[1] It replaced the ferry from Kylesku and Kylestrome, which was 400 metres to the east.

Design

The bridge is 275 metres (902 feet) long with a 79 metre long main span. The bridge deck is at a height of 24 metres (79 ft) above high water to provide navigation for ships.[1]

The bridge deck is supported by V-shaped inclined piers, with eight inclined legs, in order to reduce the length of the main span.[1] The lateral forces from each leg balance, so the total force on the foundations is vertically downwards.[1] The spread of legs supports the bridge in winds which can exceed 100 miles per hour (160 km/h), and also loads resulting from the curvature of the bridge.[3][1] There is no joint between the legs and the deck of the bridge, with the expansion joints and bearings being located at the abutments to facilitate straightforward maintenance.[3] The legs are formed from reinforced concrete and the deck from prestressed concrete using cables tensioned at up to 52200 kN.[1]

The bridge is designed to be sympathetic to the surrounding country, and the approaches were chosen to minimise changes to the landscape.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Stears, H.S. (January 1985). "The Kylesku Bridge - Design and Construction". The Journal of the Institution of Highways and Transportation & HTTA 32 (1): 16–20.
  2. "D-block GB-220000-933000 Bridge Building at Kylesku". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 Martin, J. M. (1986). "The Construction of Kylesku Bridge". ICE Proceedings 80 (2): 317. doi:10.1680/iicep.1986.737.

External links

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