Skip to main content

Bridge under discussion for UK’s River Thames

Engineering specialist AECOM will carry out a study into the proposed Lower Thames Crossing project in the UK.
June 19, 2012 Read time: 3 mins

Engineering specialist 1397 AECOM will carry out a study into the proposed Lower Thames Crossing project in the UK.

The contract was awarded by the 5432 Department for Transport and is to review the Lower Thames Crossing capacity options. AECOM’s task requires a range of technical skills including transport planning, highway engineering and environmental studies and is expected to take 12 months to complete. The Dartford River Crossing was first opened in 1963, a second tunnel followed in 1980 and the Queen Elizabeth Bridge became operational in 1991. The objective of this study is to help develop the longer-term strategy for the crossing. The study will consider options to provide additional river crossing capacity in the lower Thames area. It is intended the study will help inform public consultation on options during 2013.

The Lower Thames Crossing was proposed in 1989 in the Roads to Prosperity paper but this was then cancelled in the early 1990s. Three main options have been proposed in the past, all with locations to the east of the existing Queen Elizabeth Bridge. Two of these options would connect from an existing dual carriageway close to Tilbury on the north of the Thames and then take different routes to link with the A2/M2 to the south. One of these last options would also connect with the M20.

There are a range of factors to consider, including the fact that the routes would have to negotiate protected areas. The Lower Thames Crossing would also have to be designed so as not to impede flights to and from London City Airport. One of the earlier designs proposed the use of a concrete box girder bridge, which would feature a low profile and therefore not infringe on the flightpath for the airport. But the span required would have put the structure at the very limit of the technology available at the time using the concrete box girder bridge design. There were concerns over its structural strength, which were highlighted following a series of problems with wide span, concrete box girder bridges built along similar lines at the time. There were also criticisms that this comparatively cheap construction method would result in an ugly bridge that would be at odds with aesthetic sensitivities.

The design and construction techniques surrounding concrete box girder bridges have improved since the early 1990s and it seems feasible that such a structure featuring the required span might now be practical without sacrificing strength, capacity or design life. But it might still attract negative comment over its appearance and with approvals being a necessary part of its eventual construction, could well prove yet another barrier to the project. While cable-stayed bridges are favoured on grounds of aesthetics and also offer manageable costs if built along conventional lines, such a structure could intrude within the safety parameters for the flightpath into the airport. It was for this particular reason that the concrete box girder design was favoured over a cable-stayed alternative when the project was first put forward in the late 1980s. Another proposal has been to include the crossing as part of the proposed Thames Barrier but this may face further obstacles on various environmental grounds as well as cost issues.

Balancing all the factors for the project will be a complex task and AECOM is likely to put forward various options. At this stage however it seems likely that the concrete box girder option, however ugly, will be cheapest and simplest and with costs of any new transport connection under the spotlight due to the UK’s tough budgetary constraints, it will have a very strong case in its favour.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Delayed Houston Ship Canal Bridge nearing first phase
    February 23, 2024
    The delayed Houston Ship Canal Bridge is nearing its first phase completion.
  • New Angolan bridge offers improved connectivity
    September 30, 2013
    Drivers in Angola are benefiting from a bridge that spans the Catumbela River, taking the place of an old structure that had proven not fit for purpose. The US$35 million cable stayed bridge is located in the highway between Benguela and Lobito, around 7km from Angola’s Atlantic coast and is one of a series of new infrastructure developments in the country. Angola suffered a long period of war that impacted on its people and infrastructure. The war resulted in severe damage to the country’s road system alon
  • Montreal’s new Champlain Bridge is shaping up for Christmas
    September 10, 2018
    Montreal’s Champlain Bridges - one going up, one coming down, reports David Arminas The importance of the new Champlain Bridge to Montreal and Canada can’t be overstated, given the crumbling nature of the not-so-old original Champlain Bridge. The original steel truss affair across the St Lawrence River and the adjacent St Lawrence Seaway canal is “a lifeline for residents and businesses” in greater Montréal, according to the national Auditor General - the public sector spending watchdog. “It accommodates
  • New Zealand highway proposed
    June 15, 2021
    A potentially controversial tolled highway project has been proposed for New Zealand's South Island.