Shard Bridge Explained

Bridge Name:Shard Bridge
Carries:A588
Crosses:River Wyre
Locale:SingletonHambleton, Lancashire, England
Maint:Lancashire County Council
Design:Segmental
Mainspan:714feet
Coordinates:53.862°N -2.9625°W
Short Title:Shard Bridge Act 1975
Type:Act
Parliament:Parliament of the United Kingdom
Long Title:An Act to amend and repeal certain provisions of the Shard Bridge Act 1862; to confer new powers on the Shard Bridge Company; and for other purposes.
Year:1975
Citation:1975 c. xxxvi
Royal Assent:12 November 1975
Collapsed:yes

Shard Bridge is a bridge in the English county of Lancashire. It spans the River Wyre, connecting Singleton, on the southern side of the river, to Hambleton, on its northern side (an area known locally as "Over Wyre"), carrying both automotive and pedestrian traffic of the A588 Shard Road. The word shard is a Roman term for "low crossing point on a river".A History of Blackpool, the Fylde and south Wyre, Nick Moore (2018), p. 21

The original bridge was built in 1864,[1] and it went on to replace a ferry service between Cockle Hall and Wardleys Creek further downstream to the west.

The bridge was moved a few yards downstream in 1993, when the third iteration was constructed.

Formerly a toll bridge, Shard Bridge is now a free municipal crossing.[2]

See also

External links

The 1988 New Shard Bridge scheme by Lancashire County Council:

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Poulton Le Fylde. https://web.archive.org/web/20121019121351/http://www.btinternet.com/~stephen.yarwood/river_wyre.htm . 2012-10-19. live.
  2. http://www.fredmoor.com/thefylde/ofylde.htm TheFylde.com