Following a year of
fairly hectic bridge repairing activities last year, largely dominated by the
BRIDGES TO BROADWAY contract, this year has mostly been about getting our bridge inspection programme up to date.
Over the last 12 months we have carried out 30 of these inspections, catching up on a large backlog.
Bridge 15 - Didbrook 1, down side |
Bridge 34 - Gotherington Skew - down side |
Bridge 37 - farm accommodation bridge, Bishops Cleeve |
Having got the inspection programme completed, we now have a little of the budget left to do some actual repair and construction work. The top priority, within the budget money left available, was to deal with some collapsed wing walls on Bridge 37 above. This is a farm accommodation bridge on the outskirts of Bishops Cleeve, with no direct road access.
Broadway end wall, bridge 37 |
The upside, Broadway end wall is going the same way but the damage is much
less severe, as seen in the picture above.
The first thing to
be done was to remove the damaged wall sections and their foundations, and this
has already been done as can be seen in the photo above, taken by Andy
Prothero.The view is
from track level and shows the excavation for the new wall foundation on the up side, Cheltenham end.
24 hours later it looks like the photograph on the left. The concrete foundation was cast yesterday morning, to avoid the risk of the heavy rain forecast for the weekend filling the clay based hole and softening the bearing material. Note the clever use of the machine bucket to assist with levelling the concrete.
Here we can see the
foundations in place for the up side Broadway end wing wall, ready for brick laying to commence.
Scaffolding, bricks, sand & cement and a water bowser are all arranged to arrive on site early next week. We then have a lot of loose brickwork to take down on all 4 wing walls, and need to prepare the old brickwork so that it is ready to be renovated. Construction of the new wall will get under way by about mid week. We will be hosting a couple of apprentice brickies, who will be on site to experience first hand the problems of building with hard, blue engineering bricks, which in our case need to be laid at a 1 in 6 lean back from the vertical! Rest assured, they will have top class people leading them. It's quite a challenge.
It
is also a very remote site mid way between Bishops Cleeve and Manor
Lane, Gotherington, so material movements are not straightforward.
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