London Bridge in Lake Havasu | |
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London Bridge in Lake Havasu City
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Coordinates | 34°28.3′N 114°20.8′W / 34.4717°N 114.3467°WCoordinates: 34°28.3′N 114°20.8′W / 34.4717°N 114.3467°W |
Carries | McCulloch Boulevard |
Crosses | Bridgewater Channel Canal |
Locale | Lake Havasu City, Arizona, United States |
Characteristics | |
Design | Arch Bridge |
Material | Clynelish (Brora) Sandstone and various granite mixes |
Total length | 930 feet (280 m; 167 sm) |
Longest span | 45.6 metres (150 ft) |
No. of spans | 5 |
History | |
Designer | John Rennie |
Construction begin | 1968 |
Construction end | 1971 (reconstructed) |
Closed | 1967 (pre-move) |
Statistics | |
Toll | None |
London Bridge is a bridge in Lake Havasu City, Arizona. It was built in the 1830s and formerly spanned the River Thames in London, England. It was dismantled in 1967 and relocated to Arizona. The Arizona bridge is a reinforced concrete structure clad in the original masonry of the 1830s bridge, which was purchased by Robert P. McCulloch from the City of London. McCulloch had exterior granite blocks from the original bridge numbered and transported to America to construct the present bridge in Lake Havasu City, a planned community he established in 1964 on the shore of Lake Havasu. The bridge was completed in 1971 (along with a canal), and links an island in the Colorado River with the main part of Lake Havasu City. The song London Bridge is Falling Down is a nursery rhyme that predates the bridge's original 19th century construction.
The 1831 London Bridge was the last project of engineer John Rennie and was completed by his son, John Rennie the Younger. By 1962, the bridge was not sound enough to support the increased load of modern traffic, and it was sold by the City of London.
The purchaser, Robert P. McCulloch, the chairman of McCulloch Oil Corporation, was the founder of Lake Havasu City, his retirement real estate development on the east shore of Lake Havasu, a large reservoir on the Colorado River. McCulloch purchased the bridge as a tourist attraction for Lake Havasu, which was then far from the usual tourist track. The idea was successful, bringing interested tourists and retirement home buyers to the area.