
Photo: Suzanne and John’s Mom.
The beautiful pedestrian bridge over the Providence River in Rhode Island. This is a city that values free public space.
On Twitter and Mastodon, I follow a guy (@FortPointer) who is a voice in the wilderness for free public amenities in Boston. He himself may be able to afford the prices that have been slapped onto events that were once going to be accessible for all, but he is outraged for the sake of lower-income people — and for the world-class city Boston could have been. He may be Don Quixote, but there are those of us who believe in the mission.
For example, there used to be a pleasant footbridge that went over Fort Point Channel and connected two parts of the city. I loved to walk there on my lunch hour. Bikers biked it. When the old bridge wore out, the city — under cover of needing access for emergency vehicles — decided to replace it with a bridge for cars and trucks. The Fort Pointer was outraged. So was I!
Today’s article from the Guardian talks about footbridges that enhance life for pedestrians in London.
Rowan Moore writes, “All the world loves a bridge that moves. Usually, the point of a bridge is that it is fixed – when so much trouble has been taken to overcome gravity and tame nature, instability is the last thing that you want – so there is surprise and delight when it confounds its own rigidity. I give you as an example Tower Bridge.
“In an overlooked part of east London, weed-strewn and still industrial – a district un-steamrollered by the giant apartment blocks going up in much of the old docklands, close to where the River Lea joins the Thames – two curve-cornered squares of steel frame the view. They look like heavy metal sculptures. They are actually essential elements of the recently completed Cody Dock Rolling Bridge, designed by the architect Thomas Randall-Page and Tim Lucas of the engineers Price & Myers, which moves in a way that no bridge has done before. Its purpose is to make good a missing link in the Leaway, a ‘green corridor’ that runs from Hertfordshire then along the Olympic park towards the Thames. It also serves as an emblem for the Gasworks Dock Partnership, a charitable social enterprise that has created a ‘community-based arts and creative industries quarter’ on what was derelict land.
“As its name says, the bridge rolls. It crosses a channel that runs from the Lea to an adjoining dock, and most of the time it provides a flat steel deck, level with the ground, which pedestrians and cyclists can use to get from one side to the other.
When necessary, those squares can be turned through 180 degrees, such that the deck is raised in the air and turned upside down, which gives enough headroom for boats to pass underneath.
“It is operated by two manual winches, the tonnage of steel balanced in such a way that a bit of human muscle can shift it. The simplicity of its idea requires fiendish mathematics and precise construction. The squares roll along sinuous tracks, kept in place by interlocking teeth and sockets, the angles and forces of each one different from its neighbor. Cake Industries, the company that built it, employed furniture-makers to construct the moulds for the concrete elements of the structure. …
“Meanwhile, in a gentler place some distance up the Thames, another structure has been completed that is also in the nice-to-have rather than must-have category. It is a bridge under a bridge, a way of getting a riverside path to pass below the Victorian iron arches of Barnes Railway Bridge. Previously, users had to trek inland, through a menacing tunnel under the tracks, and back again to the riverbank. Now they can travel over a broad, winding deck, falling then rising again, that projects over the water with a mild frisson of peril.
“Dukes Meadows Footbridge is designed by Moxon Architects, a practice based in London and Aberdeenshire with several other bridges to its name, and the structural engineers COWI. This, too, has required ingenuity, albeit less for the self-imposed reasons at Cody Dock: the deck has to just clear the high-water mark of the tidal river, while giving enough room beneath the arches, without obstructing access for maintenance for the old structure. It could impact neither on the many rowers who use this stretch (the Oxford and Cambridge boat race finishes nearby), nor on the endangered snails in a neighboring nature reserve, which meant that its route and its lighting were designed not to disturb them. …
“The result is faceted and intriguing, its irregularity driven by the imaginative response to circumstance. ‘It’s marvelous,’ says an elderly user, unsolicited. Funded by the London borough of Hounslow and the mayor of London’s Liveable Neighbourhoods scheme, it makes a striking contrast with the years-long, still-ongoing struggle to make Hammersmith Bridge, the next crossing downriver, safe for traffic. It’s easier, evidently, to build one that doesn’t actually cross a river than to repair one that does.
“Moxon is also working on a plan, long promoted by local citizens, to make a disused part of the old railway structure into a linear park – a small version of New York’s High Line, or a successful version of Boris Johnson’s doomed Garden Bridge. Like the new footbridge, this project is shaped more by quality-of-life considerations than the hard industrial imperatives that drove either the original railway bridge or the big old structures of docklands.”
What is your experience of footbridges?
More at the Guardian, here. No firewall. Great pictures.
I miss that old Fort Point Channel footbridge, too! Your great post took me down footbridge memory lane, thanks!
Oh, I’m so happy you hold it in memory!
The first bridge is such fun! The second beautiful and elegant. My scariest bridge experience was with a footbridge in Mount Rainier National Park that spans the Tahoma Creek. The first time I crossed it in 1995, it was old and decrepit and swung terribly. The bridge is about 170 feet above the rushing ice melt of the Tahoma Glacier. Happily, it’s been replaced by a much sturdier suspension bridge but it’s still a bit nerve wracking to traverse its 200-foot span.
I’m a bit acrophobic so I don’t think I’d try that one!
Footbridges show a city has concern for quality of life.
And equality. Quality of life for all!
I clicked on the Guardian article. What pictures! And I agree that footbridges are an important feature in places that are by water. Also, I am in complete agreement that events need to be more affordable and available even to those who don’t make much money. Going to concerts and plays was once affordable. Ditto for movies. Now, going to see a movie for a family of four can cost over $50. Holy cats!
In a just society some worthy events will be free and beautiful free spaces like Central Park will be available to all.
[…] Hooray for Footbridges! […]
The rolling bridge is fantastic, and brings to mind the article about ancient concrete. This one used pretty simple physics to solve a complex problem (Atlas and levers comes to mind), similar to the ancients using the inherent properties of lime to create self-correcting concrete.
Philadelphia has a wonderful walkway along the Schuylkill River. The Schuylkill River Trail, mostly utilizing abandoned RR tracks, will be 120 miles along the when completed. It is a composite of many local trails being brought together. In Philadelphia, the banks of the river are too small to accommodate a trail, so it was built out into the river. It looks a lot like the Dukes Meadow Footbridge and is heavily used. It’s a great walk and gives wonderful city views. Check out Schuylkill River Boardwalk on Google.
Great analogies, Hannah. Will tell my husband about the Schuylkill one. I don’t think he knows this about his hometown.