Fulham Railway Bridge

Fulham Railway Bridge crosses the River Thames in London. It is very close to Putney Bridge, and carries the London Underground District line between Putney Bridge station on the North, and East Putney station on the South. Fulham Railway Bridge can also be crossed on foot, on the downstream (east) side.

Fulham Railway Bridge
Fulham Railway Bridge at low tide
Coordinates51°27′57″N 0°12′35″W
CarriesDistrict line
Pedestrians
CrossesRiver Thames
LocaleLondon, England
Preceded byPutney Bridge
Followed byWandsworth Bridge
Characteristics
DesignGirder bridge
History
Opened3 June 1889 (1889-06-03)
Location

Originally referred to by its design engineers W.H. Thomas and William Jacomb as Putney Railway Bridge it has no official name,[1] but for over a hundred years it has been known colloquially as "The Iron Bridge".[2]

Panorama of Fulham Railway Bridge looking downstream

History

The bridge is of lattice girder construction and 418 metres (1,371 ft) long, with 5 spans totalling 301 metres (988 ft) actually across the river, two further spans on the southern shore, and one on the north. It was designed for the London and South Western Railway by Brunel's former assistant William Jacomb, built by Head Wrightson and opened in 1889.[3]

It was refurbished between 1995 and 1997 for the London Underground by Tilbury Douglas Construction Limited (now Interserve), and it was at that time that a plaque bearing the title Fulham Railway Bridge was attached to the pillar at the top of the pedestrian stairway on the Southern downstream side of the bridge.[4]

See also

References

  1. "no official name":
  2. "The Iron Bridge":
    • Matthews, Peter (2008). London's Bridges. Shire Publications. p. 59. ISBN 978-0747806790.
  3. Where Thames Smooth Waters Glide
  4. "latter-day naming":

Further reading

  • Chris Roberts: Cross River Traffic: A history of London's Bridges, Granta 2006 ISBN 1-86207-884-X, ISBN 978-1-86207-884-0

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