Don Bridge Explained

Bridge Name:Don Bridge
Crosses:River Don
Locale:Sprotbrough, South Yorkshire
Maint:National Highways
Designer:West Riding County Council
Design:Girder bridge
Material:Reinforced concrete, Steel
Length:760feet
Height:70feet
Mainspan:180feet
Spans:7
Begin:June 1959
Open:31 July 1961
Coordinates:53.51°N -1.18°W
Os Grid Reference:SE547016
Lanes:2 each direction
Traffic: 85,747 (2018)
Count point

The Don Bridge is a motorway viaduct in South Yorkshire, England.

History

The line of the fifteen-mile Doncaster By-Pass Motorway was fixed in the spring of 1957.

Design

Each carriageway is carried on a separate structure. Each carriageway is supported by five riveted steel girders. There are 2,225 tons of structural steelwork.

Construction

Construction of the Doncaster bypass started on 22 June 1959. There were 28 bridges in the contract for the Doncaster bypass, including five railway bridges.[1] [2]

The fabrication of the steelwork for the bridge took place at the West Bromwich Works. The steel superstructure for the bridge was launched from one end of the bridge on an embankment. The steel fabrication was sprayed with zinc.[3] The concrete and steel design is known as composite construction.

The concrete beams were made by Ferro Concrete and Stone Co. (North Notts) Ltd of Retford.

The bypass was built by a consortium including Holland, Hannen & Cubitts, on a £6 million contract.

Structure

The south side of the bridge is in Warmsworth, and the north side is in Sprotbrough and Cusworth. The bridge crosses the Trans Pennine Trail (National Cycle Route 62), which follows the river. It is situated around one mile north of junction 36.

External links

Notes and References

  1. The Surveyor and Municipal and County Engineer, Volume 120, page 960, 1961
  2. Traffic Engineering & Control, Volume 4, page 455, 1962
  3. Zinc Handbook: Properties, Processing, and Use In Design, page 320