M3 Chertsey Bridge
The M3 Chertsey Bridge is a motorway bridge in South East England built between December 1968 and March 1971. It carries the M3 over the navigable River Thames to the north of Chertsey Lock, near Chertsey, Surrey. It was opened to motorway traffic on 11 July 1974.
Description
The M3 Chertsey Bridge crosses the navigable River Thames near Chertsey, Surrey. The central span, above the river channel, has a length of and the other two spans are long, giving a total length of. The piers are on opposite banks of the river, immediately adjacent to the water's edge, and are at the base, tapering to at the top.The bridge has a total width of between the aluminium parapets. It has two concrete decks, one for each carriageway. Each deck supports three running lanes, with a total width of, and a hard shoulder. The motorway passes over the river in a gentle curve and the road surface is therefore cambered; as a result, the northern deck, which carries the eastbound carriageway, is higher than the southern deck. There is an expansion joint where the decks pass over the eastern abutment. Each road deck is supported by nine steel girders, and the clearance below the bridge for river traffic is.
History
Survey work for the eastern section of the M3 motorway from Sunbury-on-Thames to Basingstoke began in May 1962, and the provisional route was announced in December 1964. The construction of the bridge over the Thames at Chertsey began on 17 December 1968. It was designed by the engineering firm, Posford, Pavry and Partners, in collaboration with the consulting architect, Courtney Theobald. Steelwork was fabricated by Sir William Arrol & Co Ltd, and concrete work was undertaken by Caffin & Co.The southern deck was completed in Summer 1970 and was subsequently used by construction traffic to construct the motorway embankment, which crossed former gravel quarries. The bridge was completed by 31 March 1971 at a total cost of £330,000. The Surrey section of the M3, including the bridge over the Thames, opened to the public on 11 July 1974.