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400 kV Thames Crossing Overhead power line crossing: 51°27′53″N 0°17′48″E: 1965: Overhead power line 623 ft tall crossing the Thames at Swanscombe and Grays: High Speed 1 tunnels Railway tunnel: 51°27′46″N 0°17′37″E: 2007: Two 2.5 km tunnels, 7.15 m internal diameter, between West Thurrock and Swanscombe
Windsor Railway Bridge is a wrought iron 'bow and string' bridge in Windsor, Berkshire, crossing the River Thames on the reach between Romney Lock and Boveney Lock. It carries the branch line between Slough and Windsor.
The Windsor Bridge or Windsor Town Bridge, an iron and granite arch bridge over the River Thames, connects the towns of Windsor and Eton in the English county of Berkshire. The Thames Path crosses the river here. The bridge carries pedestrian and cycle traffic, and crosses the Thames just above Romney Lock. It is a Grade II listed structure. [2]
Carries Tyne and Wear Metro over Wallsend Burn: Windsor Railway Bridge: Windsor, Berkshire: wrought iron bowstring bridge: Carries the ex-GWR branch line over the River Thames: Windsor Branch viaduct: near Windsor, Berkshire: Winterbourne Viaduct a.k.a. Huckford Viaduct: Winterbourne, South Gloucestershire: 1902: Brick arch
From London to Didcot, the line follows the Thames Valley, crossing the River Thames three times, including on the Maidenhead Railway Bridge. Between Chippenham and Bath the line passes through Box Tunnel , and then follows the valley of the River Avon .
Hungerford Bridge takes trains over the Thames between the South Bank and Charing Cross station. ... Restoration begins of 161-year-old Thames crossing. January 19, 2025 at 12:31 AM.
The bridge carries the A332 Royal Windsor Way across the River Thames, on the reach between Romney Lock and Boveney Lock. The bridge was completed in 1966, and has formed the principal road route between Windsor and Slough since 1970, when structural cracks in the nearby Windsor Bridge forced that bridge's closure to all motorised traffic.
After some dubious dealing by the Commissioners of Woods, Forests, Land Revenues, Works and Buildings, acting for the Windsor estate, a further Act was passed on 26 June 1849 to authorise crossing the River Thames and reaching Windsor. The line was built hastily, and on 9 August 1849 two piers of the Thames river bridge at a location known as ...