Skip to main content

Arup, Mabey launch Pedesta, a modular glass-fibre polymer bridge

Arup and Mabey have launched what they claim is the first modular glass-fibre reinforced polymer footbridge, with Mabey becoming the first licensed distributor. Based on a concept by engineering design company Arup, Mabey debuted the bridge, called Pedesta, at Bridges 2017, a one-day conference and exhibition in the English city of Coventry in March. The Mabey Group specialises in the design and provision of temporary works including propping and jacking as well as environmental monitoring services, formw
May 22, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
The Pedesta bridge comes in any length to suit site requirements
Arup and Mabey have launched what they claim is the first modular glass-fibre reinforced polymer footbridge, with Mabey becoming the first licensed distributor.


Based on a concept by engineering design company 1419 Arup, Mabey debuted the bridge, called Pedesta, at Bridges 2017, a one-day conference and exhibition in the English city of Coventry in March.

The Mabey Group specialises in the design and provision of temporary works including propping and jacking as well as environmental monitoring services, formwork and falsework systems and the hire of non-mechanical groundworks equipment.

The post-tensioned Pedesta bridge can be assembled in remote or hard-to-reach sites inaccessible to large cranes and heavy machinery. Mabey said that the bridge provides a safer alternative to level crossings where traditional pedestrian bridges cannot be installed. Being 70% lighter than steel, the modules require only a pallet truck or forklift for transportation and handling, enabling faster, safer and more efficient project delivery.

The first bridge has been installed at a Site of Special Scientific Interest for Network Rail in Oxford. The bridge modules were light enough to be transported by an articulated truck, assembled on site and then lifted and positioned from a distance.


Pedesta is fully customisable its form, material, colour and finish. The material provides additional resistance to fire, graffiti, vandalism and ultraviolet radiation. It features include 1m-long identical modules fixed together with bolted shear connectors and then post-tensioned. The system allows spans of up to 30m so it can adapt to suit any application.

“We can see this bridge being useful for a whole host of global applications – from rail footbridges to road and river spans,” said Rebecca Stewart, an associate at Arup.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Europe closes in on the crossings
    September 27, 2017
    The Mersey Gateway bridge project off England’s west coast passed a milestone recently with the first joining of two of the deck sections. The key segments, as the sections are called, link the north approach viaduct to the north pylon deck span and are the first of four deck-joins scheduled for this summer. In total, there are five sections of bridge deck and approach roads that need to be joined.
  • Light but strong, the Tetrashor prop
    June 30, 2020
    RMD Kwikform, the global manufacturer of formwork, falsework and ground shoring solutions, has launched Tetrashor, a lightweight modular propping system. It can be used in dead shoring, façade retention, propping and needling, supporting precast concrete bridge beams and structural steelwork frames and restraining tall single and double-sided formwork.
  • Composite bridge awards
    February 8, 2012
    The American Composites Manufacturers Association (ACMA) has announced its Awards for composites excellence (ACE) at the COMPOSITES 2010 event. The awards were presented in a number of categories, with two awards gone to composite bridge structures.
  • New bridge for old Russian city
    July 30, 2012
    Murom, one of Russia's best preserved old cities, is situated in the European part of the country, around 300km to the east of Moscow. The most important industry and economic activities are mechanical engineering along with timber and textiles. The location on the River Oka, a tributary of the Volga and thus an important waterway, as well as the good connections to important main roads and rail routes, are positive economic factors. It is near Murom that German formwork and scaffolding specialist PERI is p