Show Navigation
back to search results

England - London - Construction engineer surveys the new Millennium Bridge

The £18.2m Millennium Bridge (a Thames crossing linking the City of London at St. Paul's Cathedral with the Tate Modern Gallery at Bankside) was London's newest river crossing for 100-plus years and coincided with the Millennium, it was hurriedly finished and opened to the public on 10 June 2000 when an estimated 100,000 people crossed it to discover the structure oscillated so much that it was forced to close 2 days later. Over the next 18 months designers added dampeners to stop its wobble but it already symbolised what was embarrassing and failing in British pride. Now the British Standard code of bridge loading has been updated to cover the swaying phenomenon, referred to as Synchronous Lateral Excitation. Here a surveyor stands with legs spread peering into a tripod-mounted theodolite to measure its 370 metres (1,214 ft) steel length.

Add to Cart Add to Lightbox Download
Filename
bridge_surveyor04-09-2000.jpg
Copyright
© Richard Baker. No copying, screen grabbing, transmission or publication without permission.
Image Size
5426x3550 / 4.6MB
www.photoshelter.com/support/license
https://www.bakerpictures.com/contact
Millennium Bridge bridge crossing new construction River Thames water engineer surveyor survey theodolite angles triangulation tripod exact measurement Bankside job method skilled skill professional mathematics calculations precision engineering link south bank northwards under construction newest 2000 wobble wobbly phenomenon oscillation swaying embarrassment sidewalk pavement urban city capital GB British English Europe EU Great Britain England UK London high-vis spans supports suspension footbridge pedestrian Southwark Blackfriars modification Arup dampened McAlpine. public criticism critical vibrations effect resonance lateral fault errors miscalculation unforeseen algebra mistake margin of error design structure progress checking contract deadline
Contained in galleries
The £18.2m Millennium Bridge (a Thames crossing linking the City of London at St. Paul's Cathedral with the Tate Modern Gallery at Bankside) was London's newest river crossing for 100-plus years and coincided with the Millennium, it was hurriedly finished and opened to the public on 10 June 2000 when an estimated 100,000 people crossed it to discover the structure oscillated so much that it was forced to close 2 days later. Over the next 18 months designers added dampeners to stop its wobble but it already symbolised what was embarrassing and failing in British pride. Now the British Standard code of bridge loading has been updated to cover the swaying phenomenon, referred to as Synchronous Lateral Excitation. Here a surveyor stands with legs spread peering into a tripod-mounted theodolite to measure its 370 metres (1,214 ft) steel length.
Prev Next
Info
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Richard Baker Photography

  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Blog