Butt Bridge Explained

Bridge Name:Butt Bridge
Native Name:Droichead Bhutt
Native Name Lang:Irish
Crosses:River Liffey
Locale:Dublin, Ireland
Preceded:Rosie Hackett Bridge
Followed:Loopline Bridge
Material:Concrete
Length:~65m
Width:~20m
Complete:1932
Coordinates:53.3478°N -6.255°W

The Butt Bridge [1] is a road bridge in Dublin, Ireland which spans the River Liffey and joins Georges Quay to Beresford Place and the north quays at Liberty Hall.

The original bridge on this site was a structural steel swing bridge, designed by Bindon Blood Stoney, opened in 1879 and named after Isaac Butt (who died that year), leader of the Home Rule movement.[2]

The swing section, made of wrought iron and weighing 200 tons, ran on a series of cast-spoke wheels and was powered by a steam engine, which was housed on a timber pier on the downstream side of the bridge. The swing action allowed boats to pass and berth in the river as far upstream as Carlisle Bridge (now O'Connell Bridge).

In 1932, the swing bridge was replaced with a three-span fixed structure of reinforced concrete, but retained its original English name.[3] The Irish name of the bridge however, Droichead na Comhdhála or "Congress Bridge", derives from the Eucharistic Congress of 1932 which was held in Dublin that year.[4] [1]

The central span of the current bridge is formed by two cantilevered sections, with the two approach spans acting as counterweights. This model represented the first use in reinforced concrete of a cantilevered and counterweight construction in either Britain or Ireland.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Droichead na Comhdhála / Butt Bridge . Logainm.ie . Irish Placenames Commission Database . 10 December 2016 .
  2. Project history of Dublin's River Liffey bridges. Bridge Engineering 156 Issue BE4. Phillips & Hamilton. 2008-08-03. https://web.archive.org/web/20170812060126/http://www.berthamilton.com/13329.pdf. 2017-08-12. dead.
  3. Book: Cox, Ronald C . Civil Engineering Heritage, Ireland . Thomas Telford . 1998. 0-7277-2627-7.
  4. Web site: Stories about Butt Bridge . Dublin City Council . Bridges of Dublin . 10 December 2016.