Skip to main content

Go-ahead for new Forth Road Bridge

Scottish MPs have voted overwhelmingly in favour of a replacement for the Forth Road Bridge that will protect a vital link in the strategic transport network.
March 1, 2012 Read time: 2 mins

Scottish MPs have voted overwhelmingly in favour of a replacement for the Forth Road Bridge that will protect a vital link in the strategic transport network.

The Forth Crossing Bill, introduced in November 2009, was praised by MSPs for bringing forward proposals for a world-class, 21st Century crossing to replace the existing 2,512m long bridge with a main span of over 1,000m as the main route for traffic across the Forth estuary to and from the capital Edinburgh.

Due to the deterioration of the main suspension cables and other ongoing maintenance issues the existing bridge, opened in 1964, cannot continue as the main crossing for cross-Forth traffic and may have to close to some vehicles by 2017. Under the current proposals it would be retained as a dedicated public transport corridor for buses, cycles and taxis.

An impression of how the new Forth crossing (right) could look

By protecting the strategically vital transport link, the FRC will secure over 3,000 jobs and economic revenue of £1.3 billion (€1.5 billion). It will also deliver significant additional economic benefits through the creation of hundreds of jobs and sub-contracting opportunities for local companies, estimated by the British Chambers of Commerce to be worth around £6 billion (€7 billion) to Scotland’s economy.

With the approval by the Scottish Parliament, the crossing is on track and on target to be successfully completed in 2016.


It is expected that the principal contract to build the bridge and connecting roads, at an expected cost of £0.9 billion to £1.2 billion (€1 billion-plus to €1.4 billion), will be awarded in April, 2011 with the additional major contracts to upgrade the M9 Junction 1a and deliver ITS in the County of Fife awarded soon after.

The Forth road crossing will be the third major structural crossing of the lower Forth and will sit alongside the iconic Forth rail bridge and Forth Road Bridge from the 19th and 20th centuries.

Related Content

  • Hill & Smith reports strong performance
    May 17, 2016
    Hill & Smith Holdings reports a good start to the year, with trading ahead of expectations. The firm’s latest trading update runs from 1st January 2016 to 30th April 2016. The board says it is pleased to report that trading in the period has been encouraging and is ahead of the expectations that it set out at the time of reporting its 2015 preliminary results in March. Revenue for the period was £163.1 million, compared with £153.2 million for the same period in 2015. This represent a 2% organic increase
  • Scottish mountain highway toast to SuDS
    June 24, 2013
    Highway degradation and surface water pollution in an environmentally sensitive area of the Scottish Cairngorms Mountains, famous for its whisky production, are said to have been tackled with an innovative SuDS Solution from Hydro International. Poor drainage, flooding and freezing weather had led to a landslip and extreme surface degradation along a section of the narrow A95 that descends on a 10% gradient with tight bends to the beautiful village of Craigellachie on the River Spey, near Elgin. Situated im
  • A new study is being carried out for a proposed bridge project for the UK’s Thames River
    April 4, 2012
    Engineering specialist AECOM will carry out a study into the proposed Lower Thames Crossing project in the UK.
  • New Tanzanian bridge project moving ahead
    August 2, 2019
    Tanzania’s planned Kigongo-Busisi Bridge will span part of Lake Victoria and improve transport connections for the country’s Mwanza Region.