Taper suspension bridge

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The taper suspension bridge (also known as the taper principle) is a bridge design patented by James Dredge in 1836.[1]

View of the Bridge of Oich showing how the tapered main chain taper is achieved

The principle edit

On a conventional suspension bridge the whole deck is suspended on vertical cables, rods or chains from a single cable or chain slung between two supporting towers. The taper suspension bridge that James Dredge devised in the early nineteenth century differs from the conventional suspension bridge design in that it is, in effect, a double cantilever bridge. Each of the opposing cantilever systems are self-supporting. The cantilever half-deck structure of each cantilever is suspended on angled chains from a tapered main chain that hangs from the top of the tower and is attached to the outer end of the half-deck. The main chain taper is achieved by incrementally reducing the number of links stacked across the chain width the further it gets from the support tower.[2]

The advantage of the taper system is that the resulting design is cheaper to build than a conventional suspension bridge of the period because it uses less iron and is quicker to build.[1]

Surviving examples edit

Of the 36 known examples of bridges started or completed by Dredge using this design, 7 are known to have survived.[1]

Name Date built Original location Current location Span Image
Victoria Bridge 1836 Bath, England As built 150 feet (46 m)  
Glenarb Bridge 1844 River Blackwater, Caledon, Northern Ireland Relocated to Caledon[3]    
Caledon Estate Bridge 1845 River Blackwater, Caledon, Northern Ireland As built    
Stowell Park Bridge 1845 Pewsey, Wiltshire, England As built    
Second Moyola Park Bridge 1847 Castledawson, Northern Ireland As built    
Bridge of Oich 1854 River Oich, Aberchalder, Scotland As built 155 feet 6 inches (47.40 m)[2]  
General's Well Bridge[4] 1853[5] River Ness, Ness Islands. Inverness[4] Relocated to Ness Islands Railway, Whin Park, Inverness 97 feet (30 m)[4]  

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "James Dredge, Senior". Grace's Guide. Grace's Guide. Retrieved 2016-07-16.
  2. ^ a b "Oich, Bridge Of Oich". The online catalogue to Scotland’s archaeology, buildings, industrial and maritime heritage. Historic Environment Scotland. Retrieved 2016-07-16.
  3. ^ "The Dredge Bridge". Blackwater Regional Partnership. Blackwater Region. Retrieved 2016-07-18.
  4. ^ a b c Paxton, Roland; Shipway, Jim (2007). Civil Engineering Heritage Scotland - Highlands and Islands. Thomas Telford. ISBN 978-0-7277-3488-4.
  5. ^ "Ness Islands Footbridges". Grace's Guide to British Industrial History. Grace's Guide. Retrieved 2016-07-18.