Murrumbidgee
Bridge Completed 21
February 1867 Empire (Sydney) |
During this month the iron work of the
bridge on the Murrumbidgee has been completed, and one half of the floor has
been laid. The bridge is of three spans, of 100
feet' each of the type known as the warren girder, with cast iron cylinders 6
feet in diameter, two for each. The warren girder was adopted with a
view to facilitate transport and erection, and to economise skilled labour,
so expensive and difficult to obtain so far in the interior, and also to
expose the bridge for as short a time as possible to the violent floods of
the Murrumbidgee. The superstructure for which drawings
were made in the greatest detail in the colony and forwarded to England, was
erected and tested at the works, and taken to pieces and again fitted
together in the most satisfactory way, at Gundagai, the working drawings not
having been deviated from in the slightest degree. The contractors, determined on
obtaining the piers from the Fitzroy Mines; the design was at their in-stance
modified, and six feet cylinders substituted for nine foot segments. The great delay in obtaining the
cylinders threw the construction of the bridge back more than twelve months,
causing a further delay in the carriage, which, during, the drought, was almost
impossible to obtain, £20 per ton having been paid for the conveyance of some
of the cylinders from Fitzroy to Gundagai; the, total cost of carriage
amounting to £5000. The high cost of carriage also
regarded the work, by almost precluding the contractor obtaining proper
apparatus, so that the appliances for the sinking of the cylinders had to be
made on the ground. The cylinders for the North River piers are sunk
seventeen feet below the bed of the river; great difficulty was encountered
in cutting under water through the trunks of several large trees imbedded in the
earth. The cylinders were sunk without
pumping out, and the bottom length filled with concrete, the cylinder then
pumped out and the filling completed to caps with brickwork in cement and
mortar. The cylinders for South River piers
were let into the rock, which was chiselled out to receive them. The caps are sixty feet; from the base
to the floor of the bridge is fifty feet over summer water and ten feet above
the highest flood on record. About one-half of the cylinders were cast at the
Fitzroy Mines, the remainder, by Messrs.
P. N. Russell and Co. This is first application of Australian
iron for this purpose. Since this bridge was designed, the progress in the
manufacture of steel has been so great, that it is proposed to apply that
material wholly or partially to the future construction of bridges in the far
interior. The great cost of carriage of the additional
weight of iron required more than compensates for the additional price of
steel. It is to be regretted that the
finances of the colony do not admit of the large bridges in the interior
being constructed in the first place of iron or steel, which would ultimately
be much the most economical material. |