Cromarty Bridge
Cromarty Bridge | |
|---|---|
Cromarty Bridge in February 2007, looking north | |
| Coordinates | 57°37′07″N 4°21′46″W / 57.618559°N 4.362913°W |
| OS grid reference | NH590690 |
| Carries | A9, two footways |
| Crosses | Cromarty Firth |
| Locale | Culbokie |
| Other name | Cromarty Firth Bridge |
| Characteristics | |
| Design | Prestressed beams |
| Material | Concrete |
| Total length | 1464 metres (4803 feet) |
| No. of spans | 68 |
| Piers in water | 67 |
| History | |
| Construction start | December 1976 |
| Construction cost | £5 million |
| Opened | 1979 |
| Inaugurated | 12 April 1979 |
| Replaces | Round-trip via Dingwall |
| Location | |
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The Cromarty Bridge is a road bridge over the Cromarty Firth in Scotland.
History
[edit]Design
[edit]The bridge joins a junction with the B9163 to the south in Ross and Cromarty with a junction with the A862 to the north at Ardullie Point. It can clearly be seen from the north from the Far North Line.
Construction
[edit]The £4.5 million contract for the bridge was awarded in November 1976 from the Scottish Development Department.
The parapets were built by of Hi-Fab Ltd of Muir of Ord. The waterproofing was by Sifran Civil Engineering Ltd of Stourbridge. The site investigation was by Wimpey Laboratories of Broxburn, West Lothian.
A temporary structure was pushed out over the bridge piers, and from this, five pre-stressed concrete beams were placed between each pier. The temporary structure was removed and the road deck made with concrete.
Opening
[edit]The bridge was opened from the southern end on 12 April 1979. It became part of the A9 in 1982.
References
[edit]External links
[edit]
Media related to Cromarty Bridge at Wikimedia Commons- Cromarty Bridge at SABRE
