Skip to main content

Bermuda bridges being built

Bridges will be built in Bermuda, following the award of the design contract to a UK team comprising Ramboll, Knight Architects and Eadon Consulting. The deal was awarded by the Government of Bermuda and is for full design services for two replacement highway bridges. The two bridges form key links for Bermuda’s transport infrastructure, connecting L F Wade International Airport with capital city Hamilton to the west and St Georges to the east. Longbird Bridge was originally constructed in the 1950s as a
December 6, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Bridges will be built in Bermuda, following the award of the design contract to a UK team comprising Ramboll, Knight Architects and Eadon Consulting. The deal was awarded by the Government of Bermuda and is for full design services for two replacement highway bridges.

The two bridges form key links for Bermuda’s transport infrastructure, connecting L F Wade International Airport with capital city Hamilton to the west and St Georges to the east. Longbird Bridge was originally constructed in the 1950s as a 60m-long twin carriageway steel swing bridge at the east end of the 1km-long causeway connecting the island with the airport. However the bridge closed to traffic 10 years ago and was temporarily bypassed with twin Bailey Bridge structures. Swing Bridge spans 120m across Ferry Reach, linking St George’s Harbour with the west of the island, and is a vital link for both vehicular and marine traffic. The 1960s swing bridge has received extensive upgrades, allowing it to remain open to vehicles but its mechanisms are worn and it no longer opens to shipping.

The design team will undertake studies to determine the most appropriate solutions for the new bridges, including fixed and movable structures. Robustness and durability are key factors as both existing bridges have suffered accelerated deterioration in the tropical climate, which is particularly aggressive to steel structures. In addition, the structures and their mechanisms must be designed to withstand the hurricane force winds which Bermuda periodically suffers.

Related Content

  • BarrierGuard 800 keeps key U.S. bridge open
    April 11, 2013
    BarrierGuard 800 from Highway Care is said to be preventing the closure of a vital highway bridge in the United States. As a critical part of the US national infrastructure, the Sarah Mildred Long Bridge services the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard. The link allows the transporting of spent nuclear fuel and heavy freight bound to and from the naval shipyard, with an average of 15,000 vehicles per day crossing this structurally deficient bridge. The railing along the Sarah Mildred Long Bridge had begun to deterio
  • Consultation soon for Vancouver area’s Massey Tunnel replacement
    September 19, 2019
    The Canadian province of British Columbia could put options for a Massey Tunnel replacement out to consultation late this year or early next. A statement from the BC ministry of transportation and infrastructure said the government is in discussions with various stakeholders about which options it will put out for consultation. Whatever option is chosen to replace the ageing four-lane Massey Tunnel – be it a bridge or another tunnel – it will be will be either six or eight lanes, according to the gove
  • Ramboll’s Simon Benfield looks at the future of gantry design
    September 29, 2016
    Gantries first appeared over highways in the late 1960s and are now of increased importance, thanks to the emergence of Smart Motorways, writes Simon Benfield* The motorway network exhibits a timeline of innovation; lane control signals on highways appeared in the 1970s
  • British Colombia in Canada plans major road investment
    March 20, 2015
    In Canada the British Colombia Government has announced a programme of road and highway upgrades worth a total of US$1.99 billion (C$2.5 billion). The investment will be used to rehabilitate side roads, highways and bridges across the province. This plan will include repaving some 1,000km/year of provincial highway, with this plan stretching out over a period of 10 years. A key portion of the work will be to widen Highway 1 section to six lanes between Abbotsford and Langley. The proposed plan has been titl