With the longest cast iron arch span ever built, Southwark Bridge brought the structural engineering of the industrial age to the heart of London. The bridge was a monumental work of engineering, spanning the Thames in the new material of iron rather than in traditional masonry. To the French engineer Charles Dupin it was ‘the bridge of the giants’. John Rennie himself wrote in 1820, ‘On the whole nothing in which I have ever been concerned has proved more satisfactory than this bridge’. As a toll bridge the project was a commercial failure, and although completion of the 5780 t of structural ironwork was a tremendous achievement by Walker and Co. of Rotherham, it broke them financially and was their last major work. This paper gives an account of Southwark Bridge against a background of the development of early iron bridges, with particular emphasis on Rennie's contributions.
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August 2011
Research Article|
August 01 2011
Southwark iron bridge, London, UK Available to Purchase
Tom Swailes, BSc, CEng, MICE,, MIStrucE
Tom Swailes, BSc, CEng, MICE,, MIStrucE
Lecturer at School of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering, The University of Manchester
Manchester
UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
March 18 2011
Accepted:
May 17 2011
Online ISSN: 1757-9449
Print ISSN: 1757-9430
ICE Publishing: All rights reserved
2011
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering History and Heritage (2011) 164 (3): 163–173.
Article history
Received:
March 18 2011
Accepted:
May 17 2011
Citation
Swailes T (2011), "Southwark iron bridge, London, UK". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering History and Heritage, Vol. 164 No. 3 pp. 163–173, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/ehah.2011.164.3.163
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