- Balclutha Road Bridge
The Balclutha Road Bridge, which spans the
Clutha River in Balclutha,South Otago ,New Zealand , is one of the best-known road bridges in New Zealand'sSouth Island . The bridge is often simply known as "The Clutha Bridge", despite the fact that there are numerous bridges across the country's second longest river.Built between 1933 and 1935, this
bowstring bridge was designed by W. L. Newnham to be earthquake and flood resistant, thereby safeguarding it against the two commonest natural disasters to occur in southern New Zealand.The bridge is built from reinforced concrete, with six parabolic curved spans, each of 36.6 metres in length, and a total bridge length of 244.1 metres. A carriageway of 6.7 metres width is flanked on either side by a footpath of 1.4 metres; its total width is 11.8 metres. The bridge carries the South Island's principal highway, State Highway 1 on its route between
Dunedin andInvercargill .The bridge is the third road bridge to stand at or close to this spot. The first, constructed in 1868, was destroyed in massive floods ten years later when a bridge situated upstream at Beaumont was swept downriver and collided with it. A second bridge was constructed in 1881, but was unsuitable for the needs of motorised transport and was eventually replaced by the current structure.
On
1990-12-13 the Balclutha Road Bridge was classified as a Category I Historic Place by theNew Zealand Historic Places Trust . [cite web
title=Balclutha Bridge on the Register of New Zealand Historic Places
url=http://www.historic.org.nz/Register/ListingDetail.asp?RID=5180&sm=
accessdate=2008-09-21]Another bridge, the Balclutha Rail Bridge, stands several hundred metres downstream.
References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.