Skip to main content

Second bascule bridge for Lowestoft

Total cost of the North Sea coastal project is around €160 million.
By David Arminas December 10, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Lowestoft’s planned Gull Wing Bridge, the town's second bascule crossing of Lake Lothing (image courtesy Suffolk County Council)

The town of Lowestoft on England’s North Sea coast will get a €138 million second bascule bridge as a third crossing over Lake Lothing.

The original cost was estimated at €101 million, including €81 million from the UK’s Department for Transport and €20.3 million in local contributions of which around €11.1 million is from Suffolk County Council.

According to a report by the BBC, the new estimated construction cost is €138 million plus a further €21 million to provide "an emergency pot of money should any unforeseen issues arise and caters for any further complications caused by coronavirus".

Work on the bridge, called the Gull Wing Bridge, is expected to start early next year with opening in summer 2023. Farrans was recently appointed by tender as the main contractor. But preliminary work is underway, with Suffolk-based company Archaeological Solutions digging trial trenches at the site.

Jonny Kerr, operations director for the civil engineering division of Farrans, said the project “is going to mean a great deal to the local community” through hiring of local workers and by using a local supply chain as much as possible.

Lowestoft, population of around 72,000, is about 180km north-east of London and on the North Sea coast. Lake Lothing is a saltwater lake and forms part of the Port of Lowestoft. It is bridged in the centre of town by an existing bascule bridge and further out in the marshland area called Oulton Broad by a vertical lift bridge and a rail swing bridge.

The existing bascule bridge, called A47 bascule bridge, is 47years old and is part of the trunk route A47. The bridge links north and south Lowestoft with around 14,000 vehicles using the crossing daily and it allows ships access into Lowestoft harbour. It had repairs costing £230,000 to the lifting mechanism in 2018.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Recycling highway material reduces waste and costs
    March 15, 2012
    The use of specialist equipment to produce hydraulically bound mixtures can save 30-40% on the cost of landfill and backfill it is claimed. The transportation and removal of old material from certain highway projects has long been a problem for contractors. But David MacLynn believes that the answer, in many instances, could lie in the use of hydraulically bound mixtures (HBM), which he says can save between 30-40% on the cost of landfill and backfill.
  • VIDEO: Foran Equipment helps Kananaskis kayakers construct course
    April 27, 2016
    In the Canadian Rocky Mountains, there was a window of opportunity of only several days before these excavators had to be out of the Kananaskis River ahead of nearby Barrier Dam releasing its water. The provincial Alberta Whitewater Association hired local contractor Foran Equipment to bring in their equipment in to re-work the riverbed after severe flooding in June 2013 washed out the kayaking courses. Southern parts of Alberta province suffered severe storms and massive flooding that month which devastate
  • More challenges for Stonehenge A303 scheme
    August 1, 2023
    National Highways’ Road Investment Strategy for England’s strategic roads has committed to upgrading many the remaining single carriageway sections of the A303.
  • Road maintenance crisis hits UK and US, as experts gather in Paris
    January 9, 2015
    The road maintenance crisis in the United Kingdom and the United States is deepening amid estimates that it will take millions of dollars to stop highway infrastructure from crumbling, including falling prey to potholes. A recent report by the BBC in the UK said that at least one municipal council, the city of Leeds, is facing a bill of nearly US$153 million to patch up its potholed roads. In the United States, Senator Bernie Sanders is t