Skip to main content

Sunderland’s Northern Spire bridge opens

Sunderland’s Northern Spire bridge with its 105m-high central A-frame pylon opens to traffic today after a four-month delay because of poor weather. The bridge opened for pedestrians and cyclists yesterday after three Sunderland-built Nissan vehicles first crossed the bridge during a ceremony to mark completion of the project. Work began in May 2015 and the bridge has been built within its allocated €129 million budget. However, poor weather conditions pushed back the opening of the bridge from this past
August 28, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Aspiring spire: The Northern Spire’s 105m-high central A-frame pylon highlights the Sunderland project

Sunderland’s Northern Spire bridge with its 105m-high central A-frame pylon opens to traffic today after a four-month delay because of poor weather.

The bridge opened for pedestrians and cyclists yesterday after three Sunderland-built Nissan vehicles first crossed the bridge during a ceremony to mark completion of the project.

Work began in May 2015 and the bridge has been built within its allocated €129 million budget.

However, poor weather conditions pushed back the opening of the bridge from this past spring, said Mark Jackson, Sunderland City’s head of infrastructure and transportation. Particularly affected was the painting of the pylon, which needed very still, dry, calm conditions, both for the painting and the use of high-level working platforms required by the painting team.

The 336m-long two-span cable-stayed bridge across the River Wear has four vehicle lanes, as well as dedicated cycle and pedestrian routes. The steel and concrete bridge is part of 2.8km of new road layout.

Steel specialist Victor Buyck spent a year fabricating the pylon at its canal-side yard in Ghent, Belgium. Apart from the 1,550tonnes tonnes of steel, around 550tonnes of concrete went into making the pylon that, because of its size, had to be constructed in the open air. It was barged across the often-treacherous North Sea to Sunderland.

World Highways has been following construction of the project, including the manufacturing, transport and raising of the main pylon.
http://www.worldhighways.com/categories/road-highway-structures/features/sunderlands-new-wear-crossing-takes-shape/

The construction contract was awarded to FVB, an international joint venture set up by Farrans Construction and Victor Buyck Steel Construction. Farrans Construction operates as a building and civil engineering contractor across the UK and Ireland. Victor Buyck, based in Belgium, is one of Europe's major structural steelwork contractors, specialising in steel bridges.

FVB has been supported by its design team led by Buro Happold Engineering and Roughan & O'Donovan. Independent checker has been Ramboll.

Related Content

  • England’s A14 project River Great Ouse Viaduct completed
    February 28, 2019
    Construction of the biggest bridge in Highways England’s €1.73 billion A14 Cambridge-to-Huntingdon upgrade has been completed. The River Great Ouse Viaduct stretches for 0.8km and when opened to traffic next year will take the new A14 road over the floodplain and the East Coast Mainline Railway line. Work began in November 2016 on the bridge that is part of a new 27.4km bypass under construction to the south of Huntingdon and away from the existing A14. The road is being widened to three lanes in both
  • Collaborative approach is delivering the Queensferry Crossing
    March 28, 2017
    The Queensferry Crossing forms the centrepiece of a major upgrade to the cross-Forth transport corridor in the east of Scotland. It will be the longest three-tower, cable-stayed bridge in the world and represents a Scottish Government capital investment of more than €1.5 billion. The 2.7km Queensferry Crossing is alongside the Forth Road Bridge and will carry the M90 motorway across the Firth of Forth between Lothian, at South Queensferry, and Fife, at North Queensferry. Each of the three towers are 207m
  • Let’s Boogie in a new tunnel
    July 7, 2020
    The new Victory Boogie Woogie Tunnel will be the most sustainable tunnel in the Netherlands.
  • Talks continue for 2025 Gordie Howe opening
    January 18, 2023
    The tolled six-lane cable-stayed bridge over the Detroit River will connect the city of Windsor in the Canadian province of Ontario with Detroit in the neighbouring US state of Michigan.