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Home > Awards > A876 Upper Forth Crossing at Kincardine (Clackmannanshire Bridge)
A876 Upper Forth
Crossing at Kincardine (Clackmannanshire Bridge) |
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Whole Project Award
Project Team:
Client:
Transport
Scotland
Design Checking: Jacobs
Engineering, Benaim (part of Scott Wilson) and Gifford
Design:
WA
Fairhurst & Partners,
Construction:
Morgan
Vinci
The project
The Upper Forth Crossing at Kincardine (Clackmannanshire
Bridge) has brought substantial benefits to Kincardine
and the surrounding area. It provides a safer, cleaner
and quieter environment with traffic being dramatically
reduced through the village of Kincardine, while the
sensitive ecology of the Firth of Forth has been protected.
The scheme consists of the following elements:
- 6.4km of mainline roads including
a 1.2km multi-span crossing of the Forth (the Clackmannanshire
Bridge)
- 3.1 km of side roads
- 5km of cycle/footways
- 4 other major bridges
- Grade-separated junction,
and 2 major roundabouts
- Extensive environmental mitigation,
including a managed coastal realignment at Kennet
Pans.
Prior to the opening of the Clackmannanshire Bridge,
the existing Kincardine Bridge had become heavily congested,
leading to long delays for the travelling public. High
traffic volumes were also causing community severance,
noise and air pollution problems for residents of Kincardine
village.
Construction
Construction of the new crossing and approach roads
was completed on time and to budget in November 2008.
Weighing 35,000t and 1.2km in length, the bridge was
launched from the north side of the estuary, making
it the second longest continuous deck launch in the
world.
This incremental launch method of construction minimised
disruption to the more environmentally sensitive south
bank, and also provided a safe, factory area for construction
of the main deck on site.
The bridge
At the conceptual design stage, Transport Scotland
and Jacobs developed a ‘twin bridge’ strategy
which would allow the historically important existing
bridge to be refurbished and retained to operate in
conjunction with a new crossing upstream.
This solution optimised the use of existing infrastructure
to provide an economically efficient solution which
more than doubled the traffic capacity across the estuary.
In order to minimise visual and environmental impacts,
a low-level, multi-span design was developed with 26
spans, typically 45m length.
Ecology
The new bridge had to cross environmentally sensitive
areas of saltmarsh and mudflat, which extend over almost
the full length of the Firth of Forth. This habitat
is protected under European law and international conventions
due to its importance for migratory and wintering birds.
Successful completion of the project demanded a minimum
impact on this habitat. Extensive environmental mitigation
measures were therefore integrated into the design and
construction process.
New cycle routes
In addition to the new crossing, the scheme also required
construction of 5.2km of approach roads linking the
bridge to the existing trunk road network.
Extensive cycle tracks were built parallel to these
approach roads, providing a new link across the Forth
Estuary for the National Cycle Network and also providing
other routes for local cyclists, which made use of local
roads and new bridges to avoid trunk road traffic.
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