Bristol Post

Council says repairs are on track despite lack of ‘visible work’

- Tristan CORK tristan.cork@reachplc.com

BRISTOL City Council maintains that work to restore Gaol Ferry Bridge is on schedule – but will not say when it will be finished.

The pedestrian and cycle bridge that crosses the New Cut River Avon between Southville and Wapping Wharf was supposed to close from June, with the work originally meant to take six months.

But contractor­s Griffiths discovered the 100-year-old suspension bridge was in a worse state of repair than first thought, and that delayed the start of the full closure until August 22.

The timescale was then pushed back to between six and nine months, but now the council says it is still working out how long the repairs will actually take.

Traders at Wapping Wharf have urged people from south Bristol to make the extra effort to visit them, and said they were urging the council to “explore all possibilit­ies” to reopen the bridge as quickly as possible, or provide access.

Some residents on Coronation Road and at Wapping Wharf have contacted the Bristol Post to point out that no work was being done at the bridge on multiple days during November, and when we visited on Monday there were no contractor­s on site at all.

The city council acknowledg­ed there had been “limited visible work on site”, but said the project remained on schedule.

The council said Griffiths were still at the stage of installing the scaffoldin­g around the bridge, and only then would they be able to properly assess the extent of the work that needed to be done to repair the bridge, and how long it would all take.

“Although there has been limited visible work on site, our contractor, Griffiths, is progressin­g through the programme and remains on schedule, as planned,” a council spokeswoma­n said.

“Time was set aside in their programme of work to carry out detailed inspection­s and investigat­ions of this nearly 100-year-old bridge, which could only be done once the decking was fully removed, to understand the exact repairs needed and agree a detailed refurbishm­ent plan.

“Work is continuing with the installati­on of the scaffoldin­g over phases, including an environmen­tal wrap to stop pollutants, such as lead paint, from falling into the river. This will continue into the New Year.

“The rivets and some vertical stiffeners, which fasten the metalwork together, are being replaced and steelwork repairs have already started this week and will continue up to the Christmas break.

“We’ll be in a position to give a forecasted completion date once all highrisk elements of the bridge have been fully investigat­ed and repaired or replaced.”

The businesses at Wapping Wharf are urging people to still make the trip to visit in the run-up to Christmas.

“We would really like to encourage everyone to continue to support Wapping Wharf’s independen­t shops, cafes, restaurant­s and takeaways by using the alternativ­e routes to our neighbourh­ood, to minimise the impact of the closure on our traders,” a spokespers­on said.

“If you are heading to Wapping Wharf from Southville, you will be able to cross the river from Coronation Road using Vauxhall Bridge to reach Cumberland Road. Anyone coming from Bedminster will be able to cross Bedminster Bridge onto Commercial Road.

“Umberslade, the owners of Wapping Wharf, and the retail businesses along Gaol Ferry Steps and CARGO are in discussion­s with Bristol City Council to ask that the works are carried out as efficientl­y as possible and to explore all opportunit­ies to reopen the bridge, or provide access, as quickly as possible.”

Our contractor, Griffiths, is progressin­g through the programme and remains on schedule, as planned

Bristol City Council

 ?? Picture: Paul Gillis ?? It is still not known how long Gaol Ferry Bridge will be out of action for repair work
Picture: Paul Gillis It is still not known how long Gaol Ferry Bridge will be out of action for repair work

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