The Bann Bridge in 2007.

The Bann Bridge is a railway bridge in Coleraine, County Londonderry. It is the only railway bascule bridge in Northern Ireland.

Design

The bridge is composed of Dorman Long steel girders on reinforced concrete piers, which themselves rest on precast concrete piles. There are 10 spans about 23m apart, 4 on the Derry side of the lifting span, the lifting span itself, and 5 on the Coleraine side. The lifting span is 25m long, single leaf, and weighs 250 tons, counterbalanced by an underhung concrete block. The bridge carries trains on a single track about 7m above the River Bann and is roughly 5m wide. In total it is 240m long.[1]

History

The current bridge replaced its predecessor, slightly further upstream, in 1924.[2] It carried the Northern Counties Committee line between Belfast and Derry and cost £100,000 (£5,718,383.23 in 2017[3]).

The bridge was closed in 2012 for refurbishment, which was carried out by F.P. McCann.[4]

The bridge is still in use today, carrying the NI Railways Belfast–Derry line. The lifting span is still operational and a special signalling system prevents trains from being in the section whilst the bridge is open.[5]

References

  1. C., Cox, Ronald (1998). Ireland. Gould, M. H. (Michael H.). London: T. Telford Publications. ISBN 9780727726278. OCLC 39292951.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. "Geograph:: Bann railway bridge, Coleraine [13 photos] in C8433". www.geograph.ie. Retrieved 18 February 2018.
  3. "£100,000 in 1924 → 2017 | UK Inflation Calculator". www.in2013dollars.com. Retrieved 18 February 2018.
  4. "FP McCann Transportation | Bridges Bann Bridge". fpmccann.co.uk. Retrieved 18 February 2018.
  5. "Geograph:: Bann railway bridge, Coleraine [13 photos] in C8433". www.geograph.ie. Retrieved 18 February 2018.

55°08′21″N 6°40′19″W / 55.1391°N 6.6720°W / 55.1391; -6.6720

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