Chetwynd Bridge | |
---|---|
Coordinates | 52°43′21″N1°43′23″W / 52.7226°N 1.72308°W |
Carries | A513 road |
Crosses | River Tame |
Locale | Alrewas, Staffordshire, England |
Maintained by | Staffordshire County Council |
Heritage status | Grade II* listed building |
Characteristics | |
Material | Cast iron |
No. of spans | 3 |
Piers in water | 1 |
History | |
Constructed by | Joseph Potter |
Opened | 1824 |
Location | |
Chetwynd Bridge (also known as Salter's Bridge) is a three-arch cast-iron bridge in Staffordshire, England. It carries the A513 road over the River Tame between Edingale and Alrewas in Staffordshire, England. It was completed in 1824 and is a Grade II* listed building.
The bridge was built in 1824. It has three segmental arches spanning the river, supported by rusticated ashlar pillars. The spandrels (the space between the arch and the bridge deck) have decorative X-shaped latticework. The abutments sweep round to form buttresses; the intermediate piers are in a similar style. The two outside spans are 65 feet (20 metres) wide and the central span is 75 feet (23 metres). The bridge is oriented roughly north–south and the northernmost span is over dry land. [1] [2]
The bridge was designed by Joseph Potter, a local architect and builder and the county surveyor for Staffordshire. [1] Potter likely learnt to build with cast iron while working under Thomas Telford, including on the Harecastle Tunnel. The bridge was cast by the Coalbrookdale Company in Shropshire, famous for The Iron Bridge (the first substantial cast-iron bridge in the world). The same company cast High Bridge over the River Trent in nearby Mavesyn Ridware, also to Potter's design. [3] [4]
The bridge is believed to be the largest surviving pre-1830 cast-iron bridge in England and the second-largest in the world. [5]
The bridge is a Grade II* listed building, first listed in 1953, a status which provides legal protection from demolition or unauthorised modification. [1] A condition survey in 1979 revealed significant corrosion and fracturing of the metalwork; repairs were completed in 1983. [2] After a deterioration in the condition of the ironwork was noticed, the bridge was added to the Heritage at Risk Register in 2022. Amey and Staffordshire County Council (the owner of the bridge) carried out restoration work over a period of eight months, beginning in June 2022, which won several awards from the Chartered Institution of Highways and Transportation. As a result, the bridge was removed from the at-risk register. [5] [6] [7] A weight limit of 18 tonnes (18,000 kg) was imposed to prevent further deterioration, which was later reduced to 7.5 tonnes (7,500 kg). In 2023, barriers were installed to prevent large vehicles from using the bridge after concerns that many heavy vehicles were ignoring signs warning of the restriction. As of 2023, the council planned to build a new bridge and bypass road to divert vehicle traffic and reserve Chetwynd Bridge for pedestrians and cyclists. [8] [9]
The Galton Bridge is a cast-iron bridge in Smethwick, near Birmingham, in the West Midlands of England. Opened in 1829 as a road bridge, the structure has been pedestrianised since the 1970s. It was built by Thomas Telford to carry a road across the new main line of the Birmingham Canal, which was built in a deep cutting. The bridge is 70 feet above the canal, making it reputedly the highest single-span arch bridge in the world when it was built, 26 feet wide, and 150 feet long. The iron components were fabricated at the nearby Horseley Ironworks and assembled atop the masonry abutments. The design includes decorative lamp-posts and X-shaped bracing in the spandrels.
Alrewas is a village and civil parish in the Lichfield District of Staffordshire, England.
Edingale is a village and civil parish in Lichfield District, Staffordshire, England. It lies on the River Mease, around 7 miles (11 km) north of Tamworth. Historically, the village is shared with Derbyshire. In 2001 the parish had a population of 598, increasing to 632 at the 2011 census.
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Joseph Potter (1756–1842), was an English architect and builder from Lichfield, Staffordshire in the United Kingdom. Potter had a considerable practice in Staffordshire and its neighbouring counties in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century. Potter lived in Pipehill, south-west of Lichfield, and had his office in St John's Street. Joseph Potter's son Joseph Potter Jnr. took over his father's practice after his death and went on to design many of his own buildings in the late nineteenth century.
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Edingale is a civil parish in the district of Lichfield, Staffordshire, England. It contains 19 buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. Of these, three are listed at Grade II*, the middle of the three grades, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. The parish contains the village of Edingale and the settlement of Croxall, and is otherwise rural. The listed buildings include two churches, memorials in one of the churchyards, a large house with an associated dovecote, smaller houses, cottages, farmhouses and farm buildings, the earliest of which are timber framed, and a bridge.
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High Bridge spans the River Trent between Mavesyn Ridware and Handsacre in Staffordshire, England.