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Whalley Viaduct at Billington, Lancashire, England - February 2018

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whalley,_Lancashire

 

 

Whalley Viaduct

 

 

Known locally as "Whalley Arches", Whalley Viaduct is a 48 span railway bridge crossing the River Calder and a listed structure.

 

It was built between 1846 and 1850 under the engineering supervision of Terrence Wolfe Flanagan and formed part of the Bolton, Blackburn, Clitheroe and West Yorkshire Railway. It is a red brick arch structure and the longest and largest railway viaduct in Lancashire.[4] It carries the railway, now known as the Ribble Valley Line, 21.3m over the river for 620m.

 

 

Whalley Arches, east side, from the road

Over 7 million bricks and 12,338 cubic metres of stone were used in construction. 3,000m of timber were used for the arch centring, temporary platforms and the permanent foundation piles. During construction on 6 October 1849, two of the 41 arches then completed collapsed, with the loss of three lives.

 

The east side of the bridge, nearest the remains of the Abbey, has the only decorative treatment.

 

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Uploaded on March 31, 2018
Taken on February 1, 2018