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Kincardine Bridge

Coordinates: 56°3′54.5″N 3°43′38.2″W / 56.065139°N 3.727278°W / 56.065139; -3.727278
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Kincardine Bridge

"Drochaid Chinn Chàrdain"
The Kincardine Bridge on the River Forth
The Kincardine Bridge on the River Forth
Coordinates56°3′54.5″N 3°43′38.2″W / 56.065139°N 3.727278°W / 56.065139; -3.727278
CarriesA985 road
CrossesForth River
LocaleKincardine, Fife, Scotland, United Kingdom
Characteristics
DesignSwing bridge with mix of secondary span structure types
Total length822 metres (2,697 ft)[1]
Longest span111 metres (364 ft)[1]
History
DesignerSir Alexander Gibb & Partners[2]
Construction start1932[2]
Construction end1936[2]
Location
Map

The Kincardine Bridge is a road bridge crossing the Firth of Forth from Falkirk council area to Kincardine, Fife, Scotland.

History

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A map of the bridge and the surrounding river from 1945

The bridge was constructed between 1932 and 1936, to a design by Sir Alexander Gibb & Partners, Consulting Engineers,[3] and Architect, Donald Watson. It was the first road crossing of the River Forth downstream of Stirling, completed nearly thirty years before the Forth Road Bridge, which stands fifteen miles (24 km) to the south-east. It first opened to traffic on October 29, 1936.

The bridge was constructed with a swinging central section which remained in use until 1988, that would allow larger ships to sail upstream to the small port at Alloa.

The bridge's no-longer-operable swing span, viewed from the new Clackmannanshire Bridge

The bridge is part of the A985 road (formerly A876), and carries a single lane in each direction. Until the opening of the Clackmannanshire Bridge in 2008, it was the customary diversion route for traffic north from Edinburgh and eastern Scotland when the Forth Road Bridge was closed or under repair. As a result of the additional traffic using the bridge at these times, joining the high volume of regular commuter traffic, the town of Kincardine was frequently congested.

In 2023 work began to replace a section of the southern viaduct which had been assessed in 1984 as 'substandard' and reinforced in 1992 with steel supports.[4]

Engineering

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Power for swinging the bridge was provided in the engine room, in the base of the centre pier, which was itself supplied with electricity from the Fife shore, by underwater cable. The swing section weighs 1,600 tons and rotates on a radial assembly of 60 solid cast steel rollers.

The entire bridge opening procedure was controlled from a beautifully maintained control room, which has retained all the original fittings and open switchboards. The control room is suspended in a superstructure of the swing section, above the road level.

The opening was controlled automatically, by the original GEC electrical switchgear.

In the engine room a 25 horsepower hydraulic pump was activated, retracting the wedges and blocking points. At this point, the central swing span would be free to rest on the rollers, thus the bridge was ready to swing. By this point, the safety gates would have also descended, blocking further traffic.

Two 50 horsepower, 450v electric motors induced rotation from large trains of gears on either side of the engine room. The initial opening process took around 2 minutes.

Second bridge

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The original bridge, at over 70 years old, was identified by the Scottish Executive as being in need of replacement. The new Clackmannanshire Bridge[5] was opened on 19 November 2008.[6] The original bridge was given Category A listed status by Historic Scotland in 2005,[7][8] and was closed temporarily for upgrading works in 2011.

With the opening of the new bridge, the Kincardine Bridge was re-numbered as part of the A985 while the new Clackmannanshire Bridge became part of the re-routed A876, forming the Kincardine bypass.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Heritage Locations – Scotland – Clackmannanshire – Kincardine Swing Bridge". London: The Transport Trust.
  2. ^ a b c Kincardine Bridge at Structurae
  3. ^ "The Kincardine Bridge: Celebrating 85 Years". Scottish Roads Archive.
  4. ^ "Kincardine Bridge Southern Piled Viaduct". BEAR Scotland.
  5. ^ BBC news report, 1 October 2008
  6. ^ Scottish Government, 'New bridge over Forth opens'.
  7. ^ "Kincardine bridge swings to future Crossing built for car boom given listed protection". HeraldScotland. Retrieved 8 November 2016.
  8. ^ Historic Environment Scotland. "Kincardine Bridge (Category A Listed Building) (LB50078)". Retrieved 26 March 2019.
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