Clackmannanshire Bridge
Clackmannanshire Bridge Drochaid Chlach Mhannainn | |
---|---|
A876 road) Cyclists Pedestrians | |
Crosses | Firth of Forth |
Locale | Fife (North bank), Falkirk (South bank) |
Official name | Clackmannanshire Bridge |
Maintained by | BEAR Scotland |
Preceded by | A91 road |
Followed by | Kincardine Bridge |
Characteristics | |
Design | Concrete piers and post-tension box beam |
Total length | 1.2 km (0.75 mi) |
Width | Three lanes of traffic |
No. of lanes | 3 (1 northbound, 2 southbound) |
History | |
Designer | Benaim & WA Fairhurst |
Constructed by | Morgan Vinci |
Construction cost | £120 million |
Opened | 19 November 2008 |
Statistics | |
Daily traffic | 20,000 vehicles per day |
Location | |
The Clackmannanshire Bridge (
Background
The increasing levels of traffic using the existing
In 2005 the new crossing was given the go-ahead, and construction began in June 2006, with the sod-cutting ceremony performed by the Scottish Transport Minister, Tavish Scott, accompanied by the Earl of Elgin who as a boy had performed the ceremony for the Kincardine Bridge.[2]
The bridge was officially opened by Scotland's First Minister Alex Salmond on 28 November 2008. At the ceremony, Salmond said: "This is a world-class infrastructure project which will cut journey times, improve central Scotland connections, and provide a unique gateway to Clackmannanshire, Fife and Falkirk".[3]
Description
The final cost of the project was £120 million and it was designed to accommodate about 20,000 vehicle movements per day.[3] The bridge deck is 1.2 km (0.75 mi) long, weighs 35,000 tonnes (34,450 long tons; 38,580 short tons) and sits on 25 piers which are each filled with 840 tonnes (830 long tons; 930 short tons) of concrete.[4]
Archaeology
Archaeological work, undertaken by Headland Archaeology, in early 2006, in advance of the construction of the northern approach road for the bridge found evidence of human occupation of the area from between the Early Neolithic and Medieval periods. The archaeologists found the largest (206 vessels) and best-dated assemblage of Middle Neolithic Impressed Ware in Scotland, to that date. Other notable finds were four Early to Middle Bronze Age roundhouses dating to c 1750‒1300 BC; a large pit containing parts of at least 37 pots, and two large double-ring roundhouses, an oval building, and ancillary structures and features dating to the Middle to Late Bronze Age i.e. 1300‒900 BC. There is also evidence of activity during the Iron Age and two medieval corn-drying kilns.[5]
Naming
The bridge is positioned in an area where three
References
- ^ BBC news report, 1 October 2008
- ^ "Sites and Monument Record: Kincardine Bridge; new (Upper Forth Crossing or Clackmannanshire Bridge) (SMR 1255)". Falkirk Community Trust. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
- ^ a b News | Herald Scotland
- ^ "10 years of the Clackmannanshire Bridge". Transport Scotland. Retrieved 28 January 2019.
- ^ "Vol 77 (2018): Neolithic and Bronze Age Occupation at Meadowend Farm, Clackmannanshire: Pots, Pits and Roundhouses | Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports". journals.socantscot.org. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
- ^ "Troubled waters for bridge naming". BBC News. 15 December 2006. Retrieved 2 January 2010.
- ^ "Council solution over bridge name". BBC News. 14 March 2007. Retrieved 30 April 2010.
- ^ "Name chosen for new Forth bridge". BBC News. 1 October 2008.