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Chelsea Bridge

Chelsea Bridge
Suspension bridge crossing a wide river, under blue skies with clouds. The main cables are red and the towers white.
Coordinates 51°29′5″N 0°9′0″W / 51.48472°N 0.15000°W / 51.48472; -0.15000Coordinates: 51°29′5″N 0°9′0″W / 51.48472°N 0.15000°W / 51.48472; -0.15000
Carries A3216 road
Crosses River Thames
Locale Battersea and Chelsea, London
Heritage status Grade II listed structure
Preceded by Albert Bridge
Followed by Grosvenor Railway Bridge
Characteristics
Design Self-anchored suspension bridge
Material Steel
Total length 698 feet (213 m)
Width 64 feet (20 m)
Height 69 feet 2 inches (21.08 m)
Longest span 332 feet (101 m)
No. of spans 3
Piers in water 2
Clearance below 42 feet 9 inches (13.03 m) at lowest astronomical tide
History
Designer G. Topham Forrest and E. P. Wheeler
Opened 6 May 1937
Replaces Victoria Bridge (1858–1935), also known as Old Chelsea Bridge
Statistics
Daily traffic 29,375 vehicles (2004)

Chelsea Bridge is a bridge over the River Thames in west London, connecting Chelsea on the north bank to Battersea on the south bank. There have been two Chelsea Bridges, on the site of what was an ancient ford.

The first Chelsea Bridge was proposed in the 1840s as part of a major development of marshlands on the south bank of the Thames into the new Battersea Park. It was a suspension bridge intended to provide convenient access from the densely populated north bank to the new park. Although built and operated by the government, tolls were charged initially in an effort to recoup the cost of the bridge. Work on the nearby Chelsea Embankment delayed construction and so the bridge, initially called Victoria Bridge, did not open until 1858. Although well-received architecturally, as a toll bridge it was unpopular with the public, and Parliament felt obliged to make it toll-free on Sundays. The bridge was less of a commercial success than had been anticipated, partly because of competition from the newly built Albert Bridge nearby. It was acquired by the Metropolitan Board of Works in 1877, and the tolls were abolished in 1879.

The bridge was narrow and structurally unsound, leading the authorities to rename it Chelsea Bridge to avoid the Royal Family's association with a potential collapse. In 1926 it was proposed that the old bridge be rebuilt or replaced, due to the increased volume of users from population growth, and the introduction of the automobile. It was demolished during 1934–1937, and replaced by the current structure, which opened in 1937.

The new bridge was the first self-anchored suspension bridge in Britain, and was built entirely with materials sourced from within the British Empire. During the early 1950s it became popular with motorcyclists, who staged regular races across the bridge. One such meeting in 1970 erupted into violence, resulting in the death of one man and the imprisonment of 20 others. Chelsea Bridge is floodlit from below during the hours of darkness, when the towers and cables are illuminated by 936 feet (285 m) of light-emitting diodes. In 2008 it achieved Grade II listed status. In 2004 a smaller bridge, Battersea Footbridge, was opened beneath the southern span, carrying the Thames Path beneath the main bridge.


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