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

  • UK government releases second tranche of funding
    June 5, 2013
    Congested roads across England are to be tackled with US$253 million of funding, UK transport secretary Patrick McLoughlin has announced. This is the second tranche of funding from the US$291 million Local Pinch Point Fund, first announced in December 2012. A further 62 schemes have won department funding, bringing the total number of schemes financed by the fund to 72. Combined with local contributions, the total investment rises to more than US$460 million.
  • TransCore to upgrade Delaware River bridge toll system
    October 1, 2015
    The Delaware River Joint Toll Bridge Commission (DRJTBC) has awarded TransCore a US$24.9 million multi-year design-build-maintain contract for a complete overhaul of the agency’s toll collection system infrastructure. The modernisation project will include virtually every aspect of the agency’s toll system: manual cash collections, conventional toll-lane E-ZPass transactions, highway-speed open-road tolling, and future all-electronic tolling at the Scudder Falls replacement bridge.
  • IBTTA 2010 meeting focuses on sustainability
    February 2, 2012
    Ken Philmus, chief meeting organiser, talks about what attendees can expect to see at this year's IBTTA annual meeting and exhibition
  • USDOT finances Ohio River Bridges East End Crossing
    April 17, 2015
    US Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx has announced a Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (TIFIA) loan of US$162 million from the Department's Federal Highway Administration to finance the East End Crossing section of the Louisville-Southern Indiana Ohio River Bridges Project. At the total cost of US$1.27 billion, the East End Crossing includes the East End Bridge and its connecting roadways. The bridge spans the Ohio River eight miles to the north connecting the east end of Louis