- Lambeth Bridge
Infobox Bridge
bridge_name = Lambeth Bridge
caption = Lambeth Bridge, seen fromMillbank , looking north and downstream
official_name =
locale =London ,England
carries = Motor vehicles
Pedestrians
crosses =River Thames
maint =
open =19 July 1932
below =
traffic =
design =Arch Bridge
toll =
mainspan =
length =
width =Lambeth Bridge is a road traffic and
footbridge crossing theRiver Thames in an east-west direction in centralLondon ; the river flows north at the crossing point. Downstream, the next bridge isWestminster Bridge ; upstream the next isVauxhall Bridge .The most conspicuous colour in the bridge's current paint scheme is red, the same colour as the leather benches in the
House of Lords which is at the southern end of thePalace of Westminster nearest the bridge. This is in contrast to Westminster Bridge which is predominantly green, the same colour as the benches in the House of Commons at the northern end of the Houses of Parliament.On the east side, in Lambeth are
Lambeth Palace , theAlbert Embankment ,St. Thomas' Hospital , and theInternational Maritime Organization . On the west side, in Westminster, areThames House (the headquarters ofMI5 ), behind which is Horseferry House (theNational Probation Service headquarters), and Clelland House and Abel House (the headquarters ofHM Prison Service ), and theMillbank Tower andTate Britain . ThePalace of Westminster is a short walk downstream to the north through the Victoria Tower Garden.History
The current structure, a five-span steel arch, designed by engineer Sir
George Humphreys and architect SirReginald Blomfield , was built byDorman Long [ [http://thames.me.uk/s00140.htm Where Thames Smooth Waters Glide] ] and opened on19 July 1932 by King George V. It formerly carried four lanes of road traffic (now reduced to three lanes, one of which is a buses-only lane flowing eastbound) from aroundabout junction by theLambeth Palace northwards to another roundabout, where theMillbank road meetsHorseferry Road (the road name gives a clue to a previous crossing: aferry operated on the site for some years).Obelisk s at either end are surmounted by stonepineapple s, as a tribute [ [http://www.vauxhallandkennington.org.uk/history.shtml commemorative pineapples] ] to Lambeth resident,John Tradescant the younger who is purported to have grown the first pineapple in Britain [ [http://www.vauxhallsociety.org.uk/Tradescants.html Vauxhall Society:Tradescants] ] .The previous structure was a suspension bridge, convert|828|ft|m|1|lk=on long, designed by
Peter W. Barlow . Sanctioned by an Act of Parliament in 1860, it opened as a toll bridge in 1862 but doubts about its safety, coupled with its awkwardly steep approaches deterring horse-drawn traffic, meant it soon became used almost solely as a pedestrian crossing. It ceased to be a toll bridge in 1879 when theMetropolitan Board of Works assumed responsibility for its upkeep — it was by then severely corroded.Lambeth Bridge in popular culture
The bridge was used for the film "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" for a scene where the
Knight Bus must pass between twoRoutemaster s.References
External links
* [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=47053 Survey of London entry]
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* [http://photos.ltmcollection.org London Transport Museum Photographic Archive]
** ltmcollection|41/9880641.jpg|Original Lambeth Bridge, looking south-east from Millbank, 1923
** ltmcollection|03/9877503.jpg|Southern Approach to original bridge showing its narrowness, 1923
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