Skip to main content

More than 3,000 GB road bridges are ‘substandard’

More than 3,000 council-maintained road bridges in Great Britain are substandard, according to a report by the RAC Research Foundation. Analysis of data received from 199 of the 207 local highway authorities in England, Scotland and Wales found that 3,203 structures over 1.5m in span are not fit to carry the heaviest vehicles now seen on our roads, including lorries of up to 44 tonnes. The 3,203 bridges represent about 1 in 23 of the roughly 72,000 bridges to be found on the local road network. Many o
March 10, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
More than 3,000 council-maintained road bridges in Great Britain are substandard, according to a report by the RAC Research Foundation.

Analysis of data received from 199 of the 207 local highway authorities in England, Scotland and Wales found that 3,203 structures over 1.5m in span are not fit to carry the heaviest vehicles now seen on our roads, including lorries of up to 44 tonnes. The 3,203 bridges represent about 1 in 23 of the roughly 72,000 bridges to be found on the local road network.

Many of these bridges have weight restrictions. Others will be under programmes of increased monitoring or even managed decline.

Devon tops the list, with 249 of its bridges judges to be sub-standard, followed by Somerset with 210 and Essex with 160.

The total cost of clearing the backlog of work on all bridges, including those that are substandard, is estimated at US$4.7 billion (£3.9 billion). Councils are currently spending just an eighth of that, an estimated US$543 million (£447 million), per year maintaining their entire bridge stock, blaming a lack of funding and skills shortages for the shortfall.

Steve Gooding, director of the 4961 RAC Foundation, said: “In the face of growing traffic volumes and ageing infrastructure the danger is that without an adequate long-term funding settlement we will see more rather than fewer bridges with weight restrictions, with the backlog bill getting bigger all the time.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Polarised imaging gives enforcement clarity
    February 6, 2020
    Polarised imaging advances have finally allowed ITS technology to catch up with previously unenforceable international bans on smoking in cars, says Sony’s Stephane Clauss
  • TollPlus deploys NTTA back-office system
    July 23, 2021
    Vinci Highways subsidiary TollPlus' solution can handle six million transactions per day
  • Cambodia's first commercial train begins operation
    January 2, 2013
    After years of renovation, Cambodia's modern railway system has commenced commercial rail operations on the 256 km southern line between the capital city of Phnom Penh and Sihanoukville Port. The renovation was carried out with financial support from the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and development partners. "ADB welcomes this first commercial train service to the Port of Sihanoukville which marks a significant development towards the completion of the long-awaited Pan-Asian railroad - a contiguous Iron Sil
  • FTA calls for greater reliability on road network following improvements at Dartford
    October 14, 2015
    Drivers using the Dartford Crossing at peak times are saving around an hour and a half every week thanks to Dart Charge, according to Highways England. New figures released by Highways England show that journeys over the Dartford Crossing, which cost £62million (US$95 million) to convert to free-flow tolling, are up to 56 per cent faster than before payment barriers were removed. Drivers at peak times save up to 14 minutes southbound and seven minutes northbound.