Skip to main content

First half of Renfrew Bridge arrives by barge

VIDEOS: Graham Construction is building the swing Renfrew Bridge for Renfrewshire Council, Scotland, as part of the €137m Clyde Waterfront and Renfrew Riverside development project.
By David Arminas May 10, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
The furstr half of 184m-long cable-stayed twin-leaf bridge passing under the Erskine Bidge in Scotland (image courtesy Graham Construction/Renfrew Council)

The first half of a new swing bridge over the River Clyde in Renfrew, has arrived on site by barge from the Netherlands.

Principal contractor Graham Construction is building the Renfrew Bridge for Renfrewshire Council as part of the €137m Clyde Waterfront and Renfrew Riverside development project.

The 184m-long cable-stayed twin-leaf bridge will carry a two-lane road connecting Renfrew with Yoker and Clydebank over the River Clyde.

Graham Construction said the south section of the bridge sailed up the River Clyde after completing a seven-day barge trip from the Netherlands, via the English Channel and up the Irish sea to reach the west coast of Scotland.

Graham’s team will install the first section on the Renfrew side of the river at Meadowside Street, ahead of the north section of the bridge arriving next month. It will be fixed into place at Dock Street in Yoker.

Renfrewshire Council has said that the bridge should be open ahead of schedule for pedestrians, cyclists and motorists by the end of this year.

The bridge was manufactured by Hollandia Infra in the small industrial town of Krimpen aan den Ijssel on the Nieuwe Masse, a tributary of the Rhine River in Dutch province of South Holland.

Due to its length and weight of 1,600tonnes, lifting required three floating cranes, Matadors, from Rotterdam-based heavy lifting specialist Bonn & Mees. Using SPMTs – self-propelled modular transporters - the bridge was brought into load-out position along the quay where the three Matador cranes took over the weight and maneuvered the bridge onto the pontoon, supplied by heavy transportation and lift specialist Sarens.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Mersey Gateway Project reaches half-way point across the Mersey
    March 10, 2017
    The Mersey Gateway project in England has passed a significant milestone, with over half of the main bridge deck stretching across the River Mersey. Work to install stay cables on the main bridge also passed a key point, with installation of the 31st 150m long cable – the halfway point for stay cable installations on the pylon. When complete, 146 stay cables will support the 1km-long reinforced concrete bridge, with a combined load-bearing weight of more than 53,000tonnes. “We’re now more than 50
  • A new Indian cable-stayed bridge will improve transport connections
    March 2, 2015
    A major new cable-stayed bridge is being constructed in India - Partha Bratim Basistha reports. In India the construction of a major cable-stayed bridge is underway that will boost connections from capital Delhi to its surrounding areas. The bridge is being built in a bid to ease growing interstate traffic movement between Delhi and the surrounding North Indian states of Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana and Himachal Pradesh. Named Signature Bridge, this is a landmark structure due to its design aesthetics and
  • Turkey’s important new tunnel will improve transport links
    May 18, 2016
    Major advances in tunnelling will allow cars to travel underneath the Bosphorus sea channel in Turkey's Istanbul next year when its third road link is opened, writes Adrian Greeman. The Bosphorus is redolent with history and strategic significance. As one of the world's most significant sea connections, linking the landlocked Black Sea to the Marmara Sea and the Mediterranean beyond, it has been vitally important for trade and crucial for military access. It is also one of the biggest obstacles for land tra
  • Taking the coast road on Reunion Island
    April 4, 2017
    An ambitious project on Reunion Island will improve transport