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Essential
Architecture- London
Lambeth Bridge |
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architect
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Sir George Humphreys and architect Sir Reginald Blomfield |
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location
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over the Thames, London |
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date
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1932 |
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style
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Art Deco
detailing |
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construction
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five-span steel arch |
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type
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Bridge |
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Lambeth Bridge, seen from Millbank,
looking north and downstream
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Lambeth Bridge from Millbank, facing east
towards Lambeth . Painting- Image copyright Doug Myers. |
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A boat with a wake proceeds towards
Lambeth Bridge, seen from the London Eye observation wheel. The bridge
nearest the camera is Westminster Bridge, the bridge in the distance is
Vauxhall Bridge |
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Lambeth Bridge seen from Albert
Embankment, looking north, downstream. Thames House is on the far left. |
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The previous structure was a suspension
bridge, 828 ft long, designed by Peter W. Barlow. |
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Lambeth ~ The Archbishop of Canterbury's
Palace
1750: The ferry closed when Westminster Bridge opened. The Archbishop
of Canterbury (who owned the rights to the ferry) surrendered his rights
after receiving compensation
1809: Parliament agreed a bridge but funds were not forthcoming
1862: Lambeth Suspension Bridge was built by P.W. Barlow –
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Opening of Lambeth Suspension Bridge 1869 |
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Lambeth Suspension Bridge, James Dredge,
1897 |
Lambeth Bridge is a road traffic and footbridge crossing the River Thames
in an east-west direction in central London; the river flows north at
the crossing point. Downstream, the next bridge is Westminster Bridge;
upstream the next is Vauxhall Bridge.
The most conspicuous colour in the bridge's current paint scheme
is red, the same colour as the leather benches in the House of Lords
which is at the southern end of the Palace of Westminster nearest the
bridge. This is in contrast to Westminster Bridge which is predominantly
green, the same colour as the benches in the House of Commons at the
northern end of the Houses of Parliament.
On the east side, in Lambeth are Lambeth Palace, the Albert
Embankment, St. Thomas' Hospital, and the International Maritime
Organization. On the west side, in Westminster, are Thames House (the
headquarters of MI5), behind which is Horseferry House (the National
Probation Service headquarters), and Clelland House and Abel House (the
headquarters of HM Prison Service), and the Millbank Tower and Tate
Britain. The Palace of Westminster is a short walk downstream to the
north through the Victoria Tower Garden.
History
The current structure, a five-span steel arch, designed
by engineer Sir George Humphreys and architect Sir Reginald Blomfield,
was opened on 19 July 1932 by King George V. It formerly carried four
lanes of road traffic (now reduced to three lanes, one of which is a
buses-only lane flowing eastbound) from a roundabout junction by the
Lambeth Palace northwards to another roundabout, where the Millbank road
meets Horseferry Road (the road name gives a clue to a previous
crossing: a ferry operated on the site for some years). Obelisks at
either end are surmounted by stone pine cones, known to be a symbol of
hospitality from at least Roman times. These pine cones have often been
mistaken for pineapples; part of the confusion stems from the fact that
pinecones were once called "pine apples", and when the fruit arrived in
England looking vaguely similar to pinecones, the name was adopted.
The previous structure was a suspension bridge, 828 ft long,
designed by Peter W. Barlow. Sanctioned by an Act of Parliament in 1860,
it opened as a toll bridge in 1862 but doubts about its safety, coupled
with its awkwardly steep approaches deterring horse-drawn traffic, meant
it soon became used almost solely as a pedestrian crossing. It ceased to
be a toll bridge in 1879 when the Metropolitan Board of Works assumed
responsibility for its upkeep — it was by then severely corroded.
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LAMBETH BRIDGE AND ITS PREDECESSOR THE HORSEFERRY
Some authorities hold that there was an ancient British ford,
subsequently used by the Romans near the site of Lambeth Palace or a
little down the river at Stangate. (ref. 228) Whether this was so or
not, it is certain that from the time of the establishment of a town
house of the Archbishops of Canterbury at Lambeth there must have been a
constant plying across the river between Lambeth House (or Palace) and
the King's palace at Westminster, especially as many of the mediaeval
Archbishops held high offices of state. In 1367, for example, a sum of
£16 was paid to the clerks of chancery for the barge “for passage to and
fro across the Thames to the manor of Lambheth of Simon archbishop of
Canterbury the chancellor where the inn of chancery is now held, and for
wages of the keepers of the said barge.” (ref. 16)
When the Horseferry was first established at Lambeth is not
known. The earliest specific reference to it which has been found is in
the year 1513, (ref. 229) when the Archbishop granted the ferry over the
Thames from Lambeth to Westminster to Humphrey Trevilyan at the rent of
16d. a year. A provision was included in the grant that the Archbishop
and his servants and his goods and chattels should be carried free.
Similar grants of a later date are to be found among the records at
Lambeth Palace. In Thomas Cromwell's accounts (ref. 23) for the year
1538 is an entry for the “ferryage” of his horses at Lambeth and there
is also extant a bill dated 1546 from Edmonde Lewes, “Feryman” for
ferrying the king's horses “over the water at Lambyth ferry.” (ref. 23)
Archbishop Laud's arrival at Lambeth was marked by an accident
which was afterwards regarded as an omen of his unhappy fate. The
overladen ferryboat as it crossed the river with his servants and horses
sank to the bottom, though happily without loss of life. (ref. 230) The
incident was remembered when in 1656 a like accident befell Protector
Cromwell's coach and horses and it was suggested that he too might be
heading for disaster. (ref. 231)
During the Civil War, Lambeth Ferry was confiscated with the rest
of the Archbishop's property, and on 6th December, 1648, was sold to
Christopher Wormeall. (ref. 232) On 7th July of that year, when there
was insurrection in Surrey, instructions were issued to the keepers of
the various ferries over the Thames from Lambeth upwards, “the better to
prevent the confluence of people to those who have taken up arms against
the Parliament,” to arrange for the Horseferry boat to be kept on the
Middlesex shore between sunset and sunrise, and for guards to be placed
“so that none be suffered to pass in the daytime except market people,
and such as have business from the State and passes to warrant their
crossing over.” (ref. 233)
At the Restoration the ferry reverted to the Archbishop. In 1664
he granted a lease of it to Mrs. Leventhorp, (ref. 234) whose successors
do not seem to have carried out their public obligations, for some 40
years later the churchwardens and inhabitants of the parish of St.
Margaret, Westminster, complained of Mr. Leventhorp's “usurping the
whole profits of the horseferry, and neglecting to repair the roads
leading thereto.” (ref. 235)
In 1688 Lambeth Ferry was the scene of one of the scene of one of
the most dramatic events connected with the expulsion of the Stuarts. On
the night of 9–10th December, Mary of Modena, James II's queen, and the
baby prince (afterwards the Old Pretender) with two nurses left
Whitehall under the guidance of De Lauzun and St. Victor, and drove to
the Horseferry. The night was stormy and so dark that the passengers
could not see each other in the boat though they were closely seated.
According to some accounts the queen and her baby had to spend an hour
under the walls of the old church waiting for a coach, (fn. a) but St.
Victor records that a coach and six were ready in an inn adjoining the
landing place and took the party to Gravesend. (ref. 237)
Kip's view of Lambeth Palace, reproduced on Plate 64, shows the
ferryboat crossing the river. It suggests that the ferry plied to and
from Lambeth Palace stairs, but this was not so, the landing place on
the Lambeth side being a little farther south. (fn. b) On arrival there
traffic turned left for a few yards along the northern end of Fore
Street (now swallowed up by the Albert Embankment) and then to the right
along Church Street (now Lambeth Road).
An account of the ferry in the year 1708 contains details of the
fees charged—
As early as 1664 a proposal was made for the building of a bridge
between Westminster and Lambeth, but had to be dropped because of the
opposition of the citizens of London and the watermen. (ref. 233) It was
not until 1736 that an Act was passed authorizing the building of a
bridge at Westminster. (ref. 148) The Act provided for the payment of
compensation to the Archbishop and his lessees for damage to the
Horseferry, and on the opening of the bridge in 1750 a sum of £3,780 was
paid over and the Horseferry ceased to operate. It appears from the
enquiries made at the time that the profits of the ferry during its last
seven years amounted to £928, a sum which would have been much increased
if the patentees had not been at the expense of building two new boats
“the Ferry being in a very bad condition at the commencement of these 7
years.” (ref. 238)
In 1737 an amending Act (ref. 239) had been passed providing
inter alia for the new bridge to be built either from New Palace Yard or
on the site of the Horseferry. The erection of Westminster Bridge put
and end for the time being to proposals for a bridge on the Horseferry
site, but at the beginning of the 19th century these began to revive. In
1809 an Act (ref. 240) was actually passed for the erection of a bridge
on that site, but nothing came of it. In 1828 two bills, one for the
construction of a stone bridge, to be called “the Royal Clarence
Bridge,” and the other for a chain suspension bridge, were introduced
into the House, but because of the opposition they excited were not
proceeded with. (ref. 241) In 1836 (ref. 242) an Act was passed
incorporating the Metropolitan Suspension Bridge Company for making a
bridge at Lambeth, but nothing was done, and the powers conferred
lapsed. In 1844 Sir Samuel Brown, R.N., and others, attended a meeting
of Lambeth Vestry and produced a model “of the intended Suspension
Bridge from Church Street to Millbank” and solicited the support of the
churchwarden and overseers to obtain an Act. (ref. 82) This again proved
fruitless, but finally in 1861 (ref. 243) the Lambeth Bridge Act
incorporated a company to construct a bridge to connect Church Street
(now Lambeth Road), Lambeth, with Market Street (now Horseferry Road),
Westminster. The bridge, erected from the designs of P.W. Barlow at a
cost of £48,924, was opened in November, 1862. The termination on the
Lambeth side was a few yards north of the old Horseferry landing stage.
(ref. 241)
The bridge was of stiffened suspension type, 828 feet long,
divided into three spans, each 268 feet wide, by piers carrying the
towers which supported the suspension cables. It was 31 feet 9 inches
wide between the parapets. (ref. 241)
While the bridge was the property of a company tolls were charged
on all who used it. It was subsequently bought by the Metropolitan Board
of Works under the provisions of the Metropolitan Toll Bridges Act,
1877, for £35, 974 and freed from toll.
Even in 1879, when it had been in existence only 17 years, old
Lambeth Bridge was in an unsatisfactory condition. The twisted cables
had suffered from oxidation and the girders were also rusting badly. In
spite of remedial measures the state of the bridge continued to
deteriorate and in 1910 it had to be closed to vehicular traffic.
Rebuilding was delayed owing to the 1914–18 war, but in 1924 the London
County Council obtained parliamentary powers to construct a new bridge
and to widen and raise the approaches at either end. The new bridge was
completed and opened in 1932. (ref. 241)
Description
The present bridge, which has five spans and is of steel
construction, extends from the site of the old abutment on the
Westminster side to a point 81 feet upstream of the centre of the old
Lambeth abutment. The width between the balustrades is 60 feet, there
being a 36—foot roadway with 12—foot footways on each side. The
balustrade is of cast-iron seated on a steel cornice and it is
surmounted by cast-iron lamp standards, two on either side of the bridge
in each span. There are also granite lamp standards above the carved
panels over the buttresses at the ends of each pier. These piers and
buttresses with the standards and panels are all built in granite. The
obelisks on either side of the bridge approaches are also of granite;
each stands on a pedestal and is terminated by a pineapple finial. The
design was in the main the responsibility of Sir George W. Humphreys,
then Chief Engineer to the Council, in collaboration with the
architects, Sir Reginald Blomfield and G. Topham Forrest. From: 'Lambeth
Bridge and its predecessor the Horseferry', Survey of London: volume 23:
Lambeth: South Bank and Vauxhall (1951), pp. 118-121. URL:
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=47053. Date
accessed: 01 March 2008. |
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links
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http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=47053 |
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www.essential-architecture.com
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