Victoria Bridge, Brisbane: Difference between revisions
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The original bridge at this point on the river was a timber structure, which quickly succumbed to marine wood worm and collapsed. Its successor, a metal structure, was washed away in the floods of 1893. Its replacement entered service in 1897 and lasted until 1969. |
The original bridge at this point on the river was a timber structure, which quickly succumbed to marine wood worm and collapsed. Its successor, a metal structure, was washed away in the floods of 1893. Its replacement entered service in 1897 and lasted until 1969. |
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A portion of the southern abutment of the previous bridge remains adjacent to the new bridge, carrying a pedestrian arch and a memorial to [[Hector Vassily]], a boy killed in traffic at that point when waving to servicemen returning from the Great War. |
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== External link == |
== External link == |
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Revision as of 11:13, 15 August 2006
The Victoria Bridge is the fifth crossing of the Brisbane River. The current bridge, opened in 1969, is the third permanent crossing erected at this location. It is shared by vehicular traffic, pedestrians and cyclists. It connects the South Bank Parklands and Queensland Cultural Centre to the Brisbane central business district (CBD).
Half of the road space on the bridge is now given over to the South-East Busway. In the Brisbane City Centre Draft Masterplan, a new crossing immediately adjacent to the Victoria Bridge, tentatively named the Adelaide Street Bridge (the name of the connecting street in the CBD), will carry pedestrian, cyclist, bus and possibly light-rail traffic, freeing up the Victoria Bridge for general road traffic as it was before.
Former bridges at this site


The original bridge at this point on the river was a timber structure, which quickly succumbed to marine wood worm and collapsed. Its successor, a metal structure, was washed away in the floods of 1893. Its replacement entered service in 1897 and lasted until 1969.
A portion of the southern abutment of the previous bridge remains adjacent to the new bridge, carrying a pedestrian arch and a memorial to Hector Vassily, a boy killed in traffic at that point when waving to servicemen returning from the Great War.