The Tay Rail Bridge (originally the Tay Bridge) is a railway bridge approximately two and a quarter miles (three and a half kilometres) longIncluding a brick viaduct. that spans the Firth of Tay in Scotland, between the city of Dundee and the suburb of Wormit in Fife ().
As with the Forth (Rail) Bridge, the Tay Bridge's more common name, the Tay Rail Bridge, has arisen in the years since the construction of a road bridge over the firth, the Tay Road Bridge.
While visiting the city, Ulysses S. Grant commented that it was "a big bridge for a small city".
Investigators quickly determined that the cylindrical cast iron columns supporting the thirteen longest spans of the bridge (each 245 ft (75 m) in length) were of poor quality. In particular, the lugs used to attach the wrought iron bracing bars were moulded with the columns, introducing a fatal weakness. It was these lugs which failed first in the accident, and so destabilised the entire centre part of the bridge. No allowance for wind load had been made by Bouch; such calculations were not common practice until precipitated by the disaster. However, the High Girders section in the middle of the bridge was top heavy, making this part insecure. It was this section that wholly collapsed into the Tay during the accident.
The problem continued up till the final collapse of the High Girders. It indicated that the centre section was unstable to lateral movement, movement that had been observed by painters working on the bridge in the summer of 1879. Passengers on north-bound trains complained about the strange motion of the carriages, but they were ignored by the bridge's owners, the North British Railway. Some distinguished passengers, such as the Provost of Dundee, had timed trains moving across the bridge and found they were travelling at about 40 mph, well in excess of the official limit of 25 mph.
The Board of Trade, concerned about Bouch's design for the planned Forth Bridge on the same railway line, imposed a specification of 56 pounds force per square foot (2.7 kPa). The contract for the new Forth Bridge was awarded to William Arrol using designs by Benjamin Baker and John Fowler. Bouch died within a year of the disaster.
The Victorian poet William Topaz McGonagall commemorated this event in his famous (perhaps infamous) poem The Tay Bridge Disaster. Likewise, German poet Theodor Fontane, shocked by the news, wrote his poem Die Brück' am Tay (with obvious allusions to William Shakespeare and Friedrich von Schiller). It was published only ten days after the tragedy had happened.
The second bridge was opened on 13 July 1887 and remains in use today. In 2003, a £20.85 million strengthening and refurbishment project on the Bridge won the British Construction Industry Civil Engineering Award, in consideration of the staggering scale and logistics involved. More than one thousand tonnes of bird droppings were scraped off the ironwork lattice of the bridge using hand tools and bagged into 25 kg sacks; and hundreds of thousands of rivets were removed and replaced, all in very exposed conditions high over a firth with fast running tides.
The stumps of the original bridge piers are still visible above the surface of the Tay.
Bridges completed in 1887 | Bridge disasters | Bridges in Scotland | Category A listed buildings | Engineering failures | History of Dundee | History of Fife | Railway accidents in Scotland | Railway bridges | Transport in Dundee | Transport in Fife
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