However, I did get time to visit three of the city's most significant bridges, which I'll feature across my next three posts.
First up is probably Bath's best known bridge, the Pulteney Bridge. This is one of very few historic inhabited bridges still existing in the UK, although at one time there were many, with fine examples in London, York, Durham and Newcastle, to pick just four.
The survivors include the High Bridge in Lincoln, a somewhat unprepossessing structure in Frome, and the well-known house on a bridge at Ambleside.
Approached from the south, Pulteney Bridge is an impressive structure, its three arches sitting astride the River Avon, a splendid backdrop to the crescent-shaped river weir. When first built, it connected the city of Bath to the Parish of Bathwick, an estate owned by the Pulteney family since 1726. In 1769, William Pulteney advanced plans to replace the existing Bathwick ferry with a permanent toll-free bridge, petitioning for the first of two Acts of Parliament.
The initial plan for a three-arch masonry bridge was prepared by Thomas Paty. This did not include the rows of shops which are now the bridge's most notable feature. Robert and James Adam became involved in the project in 1770, and progressed on the basis of an inhabited bridge, a concept which at the time may have been considered a relic of the past, with the well-known British examples being mediaeval in origin. Indeed, Bath Corporation objected to the proposal: "It has been for some years past an uniform practice throughout the Kingdom to avoid and condemn incumbrances of this kind".
Significant changes to the bridge were made in 1792-1794, to a design by Thomas Baldwin, increasing the height of the shops, knocking some shops spaces together, adding second storey windows and making other alterations. Author Eric de Maré commented on the result of this and other works that "the original house part has unfortunately been pathetically travestied by alterations".
In 1799 and in 1800, flooding cause severe damage to one of the arch piers, resulting in several of the shops being demolished. A design by Thomas Telford for replacement with a single-span cast-iron arch bridge came to nothing, and instead the north elevation of the bridge was rebuilt to plans by John Pinch, which echoed but did not precisely match Adam's design. The difference is readily visible on the road elevations.
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Today, the entire north façade remains cantilevered, its appearance having been largely fixed since the 1870s.
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The bridge also makes me wonder about how a modern inhabited bridge could be designed. A criticism often expressed whenever such a thing is now proposed is of the extent to which it inevitably blocks views up and downstream. The proximity of tall buildings to the riverside edge is such that Pulteney Bridge is less guilty of this than it might otherwise be. The question also arises as to how an inhabited bridge can be designed to be adaptable, with the design life of retail units being significantly shorter than the design life of the supporting bridge. Symmetry is much-prized in design, but a bridge which starts life with asymmetrical blisters and blemishes would be an interesting concept.
Further reading:
- Google maps
- Wikipedia
- Structurae
- British Listed Buildings
- Bath Past
- Transport Trust
- British Bridges (Johnson and Scott-Giles, 1933)
- The Bridges of Britain (De Maré, 1954)
- Bridges in Britain (Wood, 1970)
- Pulteney Bridge (Manco, Architectural History, 1995)
- Living Bridges (Murray and Ann-Stevens, 1996)
- An Encyclopaedia of Britain's Bridges (McFetrich, 2010)
- Bridge of the Month (Bill Harvey Associates, 2017)
1 comment:
More photos of Bath's bridges (taken in the late 1990s) are available at:
http://www.bridgeofweek.com/search?q=Bath
Mark Y
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