Wentbridge Viaduct | |
Qid: | Q26609390 |
Carries: | A1 road |
Crosses: | River Went |
Locale: | Wentbridge, West Yorkshire, England |
Other Name: | Wentbridge Flyover |
Owner: | National Highways |
Heritage: | Grade II listed |
Material: | Concrete Steel |
Length: | 144m (472feet) |
Lanes: | 4 |
Begin: | October 1959 |
Cost: | £803,000 |
Opened: | November 1961 |
Replaces: | Went Bridge |
Wentbridge Viaduct is a road bridge in West Yorkshire, England. The viaduct carries four lanes of the A1 road over the small valley of the River Went at an elevated level, replacing the previous bridge which was down on the valley floor and to the west in the village of Wentbridge. The viaduct, which is made from pre-stressed concrete, was opened in 1961, and is grade II listed.
The location of the bridge is north of Doncaster, north of London, and 5miles south of Ferrybridge.[1] [2] The viaduct straddles the valley of the River Went, with the village of Wentbridge to the west, and a nature reserve immediately to the east.[3] Before the building of the Wentbridge Bypass, traffic was required to go through Wentbridge village on a "torturous descent" which created bottlenecks, and over a Medieval bridge which was very narrow in the village of Wentbridge itself, before another incline took the road out of the Went Valley.[4] To alleviate these problems, the Wentbridge bypass, including a new bridge over the valley, was approved in 1959.[5]
Construction of the viaduct required the use of of scaffolding, and 170,000 scaffolding fittings, all of which was required to withstand a wind force of and support a weight of .[6] The original gap between the two valley sides was, but this was shortened by the building of embankments at either side. The bridge was designed by the Highways and Bridges division of West Riding County Council, though most design work was undertaken by Joe Sims.[7]
The viaduct was opened in November 1961, and has a total length of, and a height of .[8] The width of the bridge is, which includes two 36feet sections with a gap dividing each pair of two-lane sections.[9] The distance between the two supports at ground level is . Two weeks after opening to motorists (11 December 1961), the traffic was stopped and a ribbon was unfurled across the carriageway for the official opening. In 1959, the bridge was costed at £682,000, but because of some extra works, including a two-lane bridge carrying the Went Edge Road over the southern end of Wentbridge Viaduct, the final price was £803,000 .
The structure had a design capacity of and was part of the Wentbridge Bypass, which took the road on higher ground away from Wentbridge, although the road does dip down, or sag, from the main road into the Went Valley.[10] [11]
The design of the bridge includes Freyssinet Hinges, the first time this type of hinge had been used in the United Kingdom.[12] Both the Royal Fine Art Commission and the Museum of Modern Art in New York highlighted the "aesthetic qualities" of the viaduct, with MOMA including it in their 1964 exhibition of 20th century engineering.[13] At the time of its opening, it was the longest bridge of its type in Europe.[14] In May 1998, the bridge was grade II listed by Historic England.
In 2014, the bridge typically carried up to 86,000 vehicles per day, of which 19% were heavy goods vehicles.[15] National Highways undertook a renovation of the viaduct in 2023 to waterproof the bridge.[16]