L.H. Ford Bridge Explained

Bridge Name:L. H. Ford Bridge
Coordinates:-32.2508°N 148.5959°W
Crosses:Macquarie River
Locale:Dubbo, New South Wales
Owner:Transport for NSW
Named For:Les Ford
Material:Concrete
Piers In Water:2
Load:[1]
Lanes:2
Life:100 years
Mapframe-Zoom:14

The L.H. Ford Bridge is a concrete balanced cantilever bridge that carries the Mitchell Highway over the Macquarie River in Dubbo, New South Wales.[2] It was officially open to traffic by the Minister for Local Government and Minister for Highways, Pat Morton on 26 September 1969 and named in honour of the former Mayor of Dubbo and Member of the New South Wales Parliament for Dubbo, Les Ford.[3] [4] Work commended in 2018 to strengthen and extend the life of the bridge, with the project completed in 2020.[5]

History and condition

L.H. Ford Bridge was built in the 1960s to replace an old wooden bridge over the Macquarie River - Wambuul, at the time of its completion, the bridge was the fourth longest highway bridge in NSW at 613m (2,011feet) in length.[6] Since its opening, the centre span of the bridge had significantly sagged, reducing the lifespan, causing a noticeable dip and increased maintenance costs.[7] [8] In November 2018 work commenced on strengthening the centre span of the bridge with the construction of two piers in the river to support the centre span and each end of the cantilever fitted with external post tensioning cables, extending the life of the bridge and to allow for heavy vehicles up to 68 tonnes, which was completed in 2020.[9] [10] [1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: November 2017. LH Ford Bridge Strengthening Project, Mitchell Highway (HW7), Dubbo. 25 September 2020. Roads & Maritime Services. OzArk Environmental & Heritage Management. 978-1-925797-15-2.
  2. Web site: LH Ford Bridge Strengthening - RMS.18.0000303659.0373. 2020-09-25. NSW eTendering. Transport for NSW.
  3. New Bridge at Dubbo Main Roads September 1969 pages 15-21
  4. News: Holmes. Natalie. 26 October 2019. Bridge's 50th anniversary inspirers memories. Dubbo Photo News. Panscott Media. 25 September 2020.
  5. Web site: July 2020. LH Ford Bridge Community Update. 25 September 2020. Roads & Maritime Services. Transport for NSW.
  6. News: 28 March 2019. $10m bridge work continues. Dubbo Photo News. Panscott Media. 25 September 2020.
  7. Web site: Wheeler. Faye. 22 May 2013. Bridge at no risk of falling. 25 September 2020. Daily Liberal. en.
  8. Web site: Bartley. Kim. 3 October 2018. Two new piers set to ‘strengthen’ Dubbo’s L H Ford Bridge. 25 September 2020. Daily Liberal. en.
  9. Web site: LH Ford Bridge strengthening project to start in coming weeks. 25 September 2020. Roads & Maritime Services. en. 22 November 2018.
  10. News: 1 April 2020. LH Ford Bridge work complete. Roads & Maritime Services.