Barton Swing Aqueduct | |
---|---|
The aqueduct in the closed position
|
|
OS grid reference | |
Carries | Bridgewater Canal |
Crosses | Manchester Ship Canal |
Locale | Barton upon Irwell |
Heritage status | Grade II* |
Characteristics | |
Total length | 330 feet (101 m) |
Traversable? | Only narrowboats |
Towpaths | None |
No. of spans | Two (Central Pivot) |
History | |
Designer | Sir Edward Leader Williams |
Construction end | 1893 |
Opened | 1894 |
Coordinates: 53°28′29″N 2°21′08″W / 53.4748°N 2.3521°W
The Barton Swing Aqueduct is a moveable navigable aqueduct in Barton upon Irwell, Greater Manchester, England. It carries the Bridgewater Canal across the Manchester Ship Canal. The swinging action allows large vessels using the ship canal to pass underneath and smaller narrowboats to cross over the top. The aqueduct, the first and only swing aqueduct in the world, is a Grade II* listed building, and considered a major feat of Victorian civil engineering. Designed by Sir Edward Leader Williams and built by Andrew Handyside and Company of Derby, the swing bridge opened in 1894 and remains in regular use.
The Barton Swing Aqueduct is a direct replacement for the earlier Barton Aqueduct, a masonry structure crossing the River Irwell and completed in 1761. The construction of the Manchester Ship Canal in the 1890s necessitated the replacement of this structure, as the height of ships using the new ship canal was too great to pass under the old aqueduct. An alternative scheme involving the use of a double lock flight was rejected, because of the need to conserve water in the Bridgewater Canal above.