River Suir Bridge

River Suir Bridge[1]

The completed bridge on opening day.
Carries 4 lanes
Crosses River Suir
Locale Waterford City
Maintained by Celtic Roads Group
Characteristics
Design cable-stayed bridge
Total length 465m
Width 30.6m
Height 112m
Longest span 230m
No. of spans 5
Piers in water 0
Clearance above 14m
History
Construction start 2006
Construction end 2009
Opened 19 October 2009
Statistics
Toll
  • Cars: €1.90
  • Motorcycles: €1.00
  • Coaches: €3.40
  • Trucks: €4.80 - €6.10

The River Suir Bridge is a cable-stayed bridge over the River Suir in Ireland. It was built as part of the N25 Waterford Bypass,[2] and opened to traffic on the 19 October 2009, some ten months ahead of schedule.[3] The Viking settlement at Woodstown was discovered during the project and the route of the southern approach roads was altered to preserve the site.

The 230 metre main span has the longest single bridge span in the Republic of Ireland, taking that record from the Boyne River Bridge on the Dublin to Belfast M1 motorway. By comparison, the main span of the Foyle Bridge in Northern Ireland is four metres longer.

Overview

The cable-stayed bridge with its 112 metre tall tower, is a landmark structure for Waterford City and surrounding areas. The tower is constructed on the south side of the river. A series of “stay cables” fan out from the top of the tower to support the main span at intervals of about 10 metres. Corresponding cables fan to the back spans using the weight of the back span and anchor piles to balance the forces and “keep the tower standing straight”.[3][4]

Other bridges at Waterford City

See also

References

  1. http://www.waterfordcity.ie/n25bypass/files/N25-PromoBrouchure.pdf
  2. "N25 Waterford City Bypass". National Roads Authority. Retrieved 2010-11-05.
  3. 1 2 "River Suir Bridge". Waterford City Council. Retrieved 2008-09-13.
  4. "The N25 Waterford Bypass PPP Scheme" (PDF). Celtic Roads Group Waterford. Grannagh, Co. Kilkenny: National Roads Authority. 1 (5). June 2008. Retrieved 2008-09-13.

Coordinates: 52°16′44″N 7°09′04″W / 52.2788°N 7.151°W / 52.2788; -7.151

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.