Skip to main content

Cleveland to renovate Redcliffe Bridge

The iconic UK bascule bridge crossing Bristol city’s harbour was built in 1942.
By David Arminas March 19, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
The structure is a steel counterbalanced, single 15.5m-long leaf bridge with a 15.5m span (photo courtesy Bristol City Council)

Cleveland Bridge in the UK will renovate the city of Bristol’s Redcliffe Bridge, a bascule crossing of the harbour and which was built in 1942.
 
The iconic two-lane bridge, which links Redcliffe Way to the city centre, underwent a major electrical and control system refit in 1996. A full electrical and mechanical inspection was completed by CH2MHill - now part of Jacobs Engineering Group - in June 2017 with the intention to extend the life of the bridge by 20 years.
 
As principal contractor, Cleveland Bridge, along with Jacobs' design house, will start work likely in April. Work includes refurbishment of the internal steelwork and bridge parapet, water proofing of the bridge deck and mechanical and electrical modifications. Traffic gates and machinery will be replaced with rising-arm barriers.

“Alongside our proud reputation for building bridges in the UK and around the world we are also gaining a strong track record for rehabilitation projects, which is extending the life of important pieces of transport infrastructure such as the iconic Redcliffe Bridge,” said Chris Droogan, managing director of Cleveland Bridge.
 
According to the CH2MHill report, the structure is a steel counterbalanced, single 15.5m long leaf bridge with a 15.5m span. The bridge has not been regularly raised for several years renovation work will include make raising the bascule totally automatic unlike now where an operator must initiative consecutive phases of the raising.

Renovations costs have risen dramatically – 40 per cent - since last year, according to local media reports. Bristol City Council had budgeted £3 million (€3.5 million/US$4.2 million) to repair the bridge and was expecting to award a 16-month contract last September. But another £1.25million (€1.5 million/$1.75 million) has been added to the cost and work is expected to finish in March 2022, two months later than previously planned.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cummins posts strong results
    May 5, 2022
    Cummins has posted record quarterly revenues amid healthy off-highway engine demand
  • Canada, US officials soon to settle planned Detroit bridge issue
    February 5, 2015
    An end to a thorny issue is close at hand concerning who will fund construction of a border customs plaza on the US side of a planned bridge linking Canada and the United States. US President Barack Obama’s US$4-trillion budget did not set aside any money for the plaza for a second consecutive year, further irritating Canadian officials who are overseeing construction of the bridge. It appears that the Canadian government might end up footing the entire bill, according to a report in Toronto’s Globe a
  • 2-year delay to new Kentucky bridge could cost US $300mn
    August 24, 2012
    The cost of the Brent Spence Bridge project in Kentucky could rise by US $300 million, to around US $2.76 billion, if its completion is delayed by two years, according to a report by the US Federal Highway Administration.
  • Hill & Smith reports strong financial performance
    November 18, 2016
    Hill & Smith Holdings reports a healthy performance for the period 1 July 2016 to 31 October 2016. The firm’s board says that trading has continued to be encouraging and that it expects Group trading performance for the current financial year to be at the top end of market expectations. The group’s results will also benefit from the positive translational impact on its overseas earnings from the recent weakness in Sterling.