Skip to main content

Renfrew Bridge opening tests complete

The 184m-long cable-stay bridge near Glasgow, Scotland, will be the first road bridge across the River Clyde to open for passing ships.
By David Arminas August 28, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
The cable stay system is similar to Scotland’s Queensferry Crossing bridge - a twin-leaf design with each leaf opening and closing horizontally (image courtesy Graham Construction)

The first operational working of the Renfrew Bridge near Glasgow, Scotland has been accomplished ahead of the bridge opening by the end of this year.

Main contractor Graham said it will continue commissioning works for the bridge that will be the first road bridge across the River Clyde to open for passing ships. The 184m-long cable-stay two-lane road bridge will carry vehicles, pedestrians and cyclists between Glasgow and West Dunbartonshire.

The cable stay system is similar to the Queensferry Crossing - a twin-leaf design with each leaf opening and closing horizontally. Most commercial ships travel on the river during high tide, which happens once during the day and once during the night. When this happens, the bridge will be closed to road traffic, with signs nearby and information online providing advance notice of any closure to all people to plan ahead.

There will be new walking and cycling routes alongside all new roads through Renfrew and across the bridge.

The bridge is central to the major Clyde Waterfront and Renfrew Riverside redevelopment. “It was great to see the bridge closing for the first time in such a smooth, controlled and seamless operation,” said Jim Armour, project director at Graham, a privately-owned national construction company with a €1.32 billion turnover.

The two sections of the bridge were manufactured in the Netherlands and barged over, passing up the English Channel and then up the Irish sea to the site earlier this year.

The project is jointly funded by the UK and Scottish governments through the €1.32 billion Glasgow City Region, a partnership of eight councils working together.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Special concrete paver for UK road job
    January 5, 2015
    A specially adapted Wirtgen SP25i concrete slipformer has been used on the M6 motorway near Cannock in the UK. The machine worked together with a Wirtgen ISF25i (independent side feeder) in order to pave a concrete slab under difficult conditions. With an overall length of 373km, the M6 is the longest and one of the most heavily congested motorways in the UK. The M6 connects the M1 motorway near Rugby with Carlisle near the Scottish border. But due to the steadily growing volume of traffic, the Highways
  • Florida and one.network in lane closure pilot
    August 30, 2022
    The project will use Live Link, one.network's proprietary shared road management platform that connects with major GPS providers in the US.
  • Stirling Lloyd in the fast lane: Waterproofing Warsaw’s Rowecki Bridge
    January 19, 2016
    Warsaw’s General Stefan Rowecki Bridge, or the Grota Bridge, is the second largest in the Polish capital and, as part of the Trasa Toruska expressway, it is the busiest. The structure, which opened in 1981, handles 150,000 cars daily, so repairs were always going to be tricky if minimal disruption to traffic was to occur. The steel orthotropic deck consists of two structurally independent parts – each with four traffic lanes. This meant that pedestrians and cyclists were restricted to two very narrow track
  • Durability is crucial while warm mix technology can help disaster recovery
    February 21, 2013
    Why durability is crucial for both emerging and developed economies, and how warm mix technology can help disaster recovery - Kristina Smith reports. When CORE Construction, a 100% owned Ghanaian company, started working on road construction projects five years ago, it was difficult to source the right bituminous mixes. “In the past, most construction firms had a number of challenges when it came to bituminous works, since the local capacity was not well-developed,” said CORE CEO Frank Lartey. CORE’s soluti