GLOUCESTERSHIRE
WARWICKSHIRE RAILWAY
REVIEW OF
BRIDGE HEADROOM CLEARANCES & STRIKE HISTORIES
The GWS Railway has intersections with roads and farm tracks at 46
places along the roughly 15 miles of trackbed that it owns.
Of these, 17 are Overline bridges, where the road goes over the
railway and consequently these bridges cannot be subjected to impact from any
road vehicle, whatever their height. This leaves 29 bridges which could be the
subject of a vehicle strike.
We next have a group of 12 Underline Farm Accommodation bridges, which
allow small farm vehicles, tractors and trailers and similar, to pass beneath
the railway from one part of a farm to another. These bridges have widths and
headrooms of the order of 3 to 3.5m.
They are never used by standard road vehicles so do not present any risk
of being struck. This then leaves us with 17 bridges to assess.
There are only 2 structures on the railway that meet current minimum motorway
standards of 5.03m (16’-6”) namely – 12 (Stanway Viaduct) and 21 – Pottery
Bridge. This latter is a brick arch bridge which only provides the full
headroom clearance across the centre 3m width. See pictures below.
Bridge 12 (Stanway Viaduct) - roadside pier under repair. The height
to the arch springing point bed stone (hidden behind thick Ivy- since
removed!!) is app. 6m (19’- 9”). The
semi-circular arch rises a further 5m (16’-0”) app .
As noted Bridge 21 (Pottery Bridge) provides the full standard minimum clearance, only between the two vertical white lines, visible in this picture. |
The remaining 15 bridges, their headrooms, road crossing details and our
knowledge of their strike histories, are detailed in the chart below. As you can see
there are 6 bridges that have never been hit. You will also see that several of
those hit-free ones are lower (up to 530mm lower) than Bridge 1 at Broadway. Clearly
it is not just a question of height but also of the traffic likely to be using
the road. As you can see virtually all of our bridges cross unclassified roads,
but naturally some are busier than others and perhaps then attract more, and larger
vehicles than others.
Thus our strike “problems” really
only relate to 9 bridges, of which 5 have only been hit only once. 6 of the 9
that have been hit were done without our knowledge, but were spotted during the
regular visual inspections that we carry out. Thus they could have occurred
prior to our ownership, i.e. over 34 years ago, or at any time before that.
Thus and finally, it becomes clear that the serious bridge strike problems
only lie with bridges 1 & 39, plus the recent addition of bridge 6. We
think that this one is slowly becoming known to the local users, who had about
25 years without a deck to worry about!
Bridge No.
|
Bridge
Name
|
Chainage
|
Headroom
Metric ;
(Ft. & Ins)
|
Road
beneath
|
Strike
history
|
Type
|
1
|
Station
Road, Broadway
|
4 - 76
|
4.4 M :
14 ’– 3”
|
B 4632
|
At least
10 known
|
Steel
deck
|
2
|
Childswickham
Road, Broadway
|
5 – 16
|
4.8 M :
15’ – 9”
|
Unclassified
|
2 minor
|
Steel
deck
|
3
|
Pry Lane
|
5 – 34
|
3.4 M :
11’ – 3”
|
U/C &
Cul-de-sac
|
1 extremely
minor
|
Brick
arch
|
5
|
Little
Buckland
|
6 – 26
|
4.1 M :
13’ - 6”
|
Unclassified
|
None
|
Steel
deck
|
6
|
Laverton
Halt (Opened 12. 2009)
|
6 – 79
|
4.0 M :
13’ – 3”
|
Unclassified
|
At least
4 since 2009
|
Concrete
deck
|
15
|
Didbrook
1
|
10 – 03
|
4.5 M :
14’ – 6”
|
Unclassified
|
None
|
Brick
arch
|
16
|
Didbrook
2
|
10 – 14
|
4.2 M :
13’ – 9”
|
Unclassified
|
None
|
Concrete
deck
|
26
|
Gretton
Village
|
13 – 33
|
4.5 M :
14’ – 9”
|
Unclassified
|
1 medium
|
Steel
deck
|
28
|
Stanley
Pontlarge
|
13 – 67
|
3.7 M :
12’ - 6”
|
U/C &
Cul-de-sac
|
None
|
Steel
deck
|
31
|
J. J.
Farms, Far Stanley
|
14 – 28
|
3.6 M :
12’ – 0”
|
U/C &
Cul-de-sac
|
1 minor
|
Steel
deck
|
32
|
Prescott
Road
|
14 – 40
|
4.3 M :
14’ – 0”
|
Unclassified
|
1 minor /
medium
|
Steel
deck
|
34
|
Gotherington
Skew
|
15 – 17
|
4.3 M :
14’ – 0”
|
Unclassified
|
1 minor
|
Steel
deck
|
35
|
Granna
Lane
|
15 – 25
|
3.7 M :
12’ – 6”
|
U/C &
Cul-de-sac
|
None
|
Conc.
Filled trough
|
36
|
Manor
Lane
|
15 – 71
|
3.8 M :
12’ – 9”
|
U/C &
Cul-de-sac
|
None
|
Brick
Arch
|
39
|
Station
Road, Bishops Cleeve
|
16 – 71
|
4.0 M :
13’ – 3”
|
Unclassified
|
At least
4 known
|
Steel
deck
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
It is a fact of life
that any vehicle which does strike a bridge, unless it is jammed tightly, will
try to get away before anybody sees it, as the consequences of prosecution and
recovery of damage repair costs, insurance excess, etc. could be very
substantial.
Mostly, the only way that we know that a
strike has occurred is because of the debris left behind, in the road, see
photo - left.
Bridge 1, is over a long straight
section of the very busy, former A46 road from Broadway to Evesham, and
consequently is a very attractive road to lorries. Despite being a fairly high
one, this bridge has been subject to many strikes over most of its life. It is likely
that there has been a decrease in frequency since the Broadway by-pass was opened,
in 1998, but several strikes have occurred since.
After the trains stopped running in
1976, because none of the strikes was serious enough to warrant an immediate
repair, no attempt has been made to do so, either by Network Rail (British
Rail), before 1981, or GWSR, since. Consequently, since the 3 really bad strikes
had happened, it has become almost impossible to identify subsequent minor
grazes, as vehicles tend to strike roughly the same part of the bridge each
time. The total number of strikes, on this bridge, could therefore be far more
that stated.
Following the recent repairs and
upgrading and painting works, of this bridge, completed in September 2014,
there have been at least 4 strikes within a period of 3 weeks. Almost certainly this was partly down to the
introduction of a road diversion scheme which, we believe, directed some
over-height traffic under this bridge. Complaints to Worcs C.C. Highways dept.
led to the diversion being changed and the repeated strike situation seems to
have stopped.
Bridge 6 stood, until 2009, without any
deck at all for over 25 years and this may have led to a spate of strikes in
the first 3 or 4 years, after the new deck was constructed.
Laverton and its new deck being built |
We are fairly
certain that the damage is being caused by a locally owned hydraulic tele-handler. Again repeated strikes, in
roughly the same position, make it difficult to tell if further strikes have
occurred or not. We suspect that there hasn’t been a strike for a year or more
and so we may be able to get a concrete repair done and will then know for
certain. Maybe the driver has finally realised that it is causing his 8 T. machine
far more damage than our 125 tonne bridge deck!!
Since I became the Bridges Engineer in
2005 there have been just 2 cases where, either the vehicle has become wedged,
or the damage to the vehicle meant that it stayed at site long enough for there
to be witnesses to get details of the vehicle, to support a claim. In a 3rd case we were also able to
make a claim. The bridges were :-
1. No.
1 (Station Road, Broadway) – payment received from our insurers, but recovery
of our excess is not clear. Repairs done in 2014.
2. No.
26 (Gretton Village) – payment from our insurers and recovery of our excess.
Repairs done in 2009.
3. No.
39 (Station Road, Bishops Cleeve) – payment received from our insurers in 2008.
Excess not recovered. Repairs still outstanding.
This last Bridge No.39
– Station Road, Bishops Cleeve - was struck in March 2007. It is in a large and
expanding residential area with several businesses close to the bridge and a
large school, not far away, with most children being drawn from the area around
the bridge. Thus the need for a complete closure will inevitably cause huge
disruption to many people and businesses, although provision for pedestrians, through
the works, will be provided. The bridge
only has an alternately worked one way priority traffic system (see photo left) so traffic light controlled, one way working is not possible.
SUMMARY
OF BRIDGE STRIKE PROBLEMS
Hopefully, from the data above, it is
clear that our main problem only lies with bridge 1. Our Civil Engineering Director is looking
into the various options available to introduce extra warning signs, or
barriers (costs are huge!). Hopefully our relationship with Worcestershire
County Council, during the B2B contract may lead to more of a shared
responsibility in mitigating future strikes.
17th
January 2015