CROSSINGS OF THE RIVER THAMES
This is a list of 'crossings of the River Thames', downstream first, including bridges, tunnels and ferries. In all, there are 214 bridges, 17 tunnels, five public ferries but not one ford.[1] However, it does not include the 45 locks where the river may be crossed.
★ ''proposed'' Lower Thames Crossing, not yet formally announced; possibly to connect the Isle of Grain in Kent with Canvey Island in Essex
★ Gravesend - Tilbury Ferry, a passenger ferry.
★ Channel Tunnel Rail Link rail tunnels from Swanscombe in Kent to West Thurrock in Essex. (Two 2.5 km tunnels, 7.15 m internal diameter.)
★ Dartford Crossing including two Dartford Tunnels (1963 and 1980) and the cable-stayed Queen Elizabeth II Bridge (1991)
★ Dartford Cable Tunnel (2003; tunnel carrying electrical cable; accessible by authorised personnel only)
★ 380kV Thames Crossing - powerline crossing at West Thurrock
★ ''proposed'' Thames Gateway Bridge, expected to be built between 2009 and 2013 to connect Beckton with Thamesmead
★ ''under construction'' Docklands Light Railway tunnel (between King George V and Woolwich Arsenal stations, expected 2009)
★ Woolwich foot tunnel (1912)
★ Woolwich Ferry
★ ''proposed'' Crossrail tunnel
★ Thames Barrier - connects the banks of the river via a service tunnel accessible by authorised personnel only.
★ ''proposed'' Silvertown Link bridge or tunnel to relieve the Blackwall Tunnels
★ Jubilee Line tunnels (between North Greenwich and Canning Town; 1999)
★ Blackwall Tunnels (Alexander Binnie, 1897; second bore 1967)
★ Jubilee Line tunnels (between Canary Wharf and North Greenwich; 1999)
★ Docklands Light Railway tunnel (between Island Gardens and Cutty Sark; 1999)
★ Greenwich foot tunnel (Alexander Binnie, 1902)
★ Jubilee Line tunnels (between Canada Water and Canary Wharf; 1999)
★ Rotherhithe Tunnel (Maurice Fitzmaurice, 1908)
★ Thames Tunnel (Wapping to Rotherhithe Tunnel) (Marc Brunel, 1843; the world's first underwater tunnel, now part of the East London Line)
★ Tower Bridge (1894)
★ Tower Subway (Peter W. Barlow and James Henry Greathead; 1870. The world's first underground tube railway, cable hauled - now used for water mains and telephone cables and not accessible)
★ Northern Line (City branch) tunnels (between London Bridge and Bank; 1900)
★ London Bridge (1973)
★ City & South London Railway tunnels (This railway's original crossing of the river between Borough and King William Street; 1890. Abandoned in 1900 when the Northern Line City branch tunnels were opened on a new alignment)
★ Cannon Street Railway Bridge (1982)
★ Southwark Bridge (1921)
★ Millennium Bridge (2002)
★ Blackfriars Railway Bridge (1886)
★ Blackfriars Bridge (1869)
★ Waterloo & City Line tunnels (between Waterloo and Bank; 1898)
★ Waterloo Bridge (1945) (the "women's bridge")
★ Northern Line (Charing Cross branch) tunnels (between Waterloo and Embankment; 1926)
★ Hungerford Footbridges (Golden Jubilee Bridges) (2002)
★ Charing Cross (Hungerford) Bridge (1864)
★ Bakerloo Line tunnels (between Waterloo and Embankment; 1906)
★ Jubilee Line tunnels (between Waterloo and Westminster; 1999)
★ Westminster Bridge (1862)
★ Lambeth Bridge (1932)
★ Vauxhall Bridge (1906)
★ Victoria Line tunnels (between Vauxhall and Pimlico; 1971)
★ Grosvenor Bridge (Victoria Railway Bridge) (1859)
★ Chelsea Bridge (1937)
★ Albert Bridge (1873)
★ Battersea Bridge (Sir Joseph Bazalgette, 1890) (Henry Holland, 1771)
★ Battersea Railway Bridge (1863)
★ Wandsworth Bridge (1938)
★ Fulham Railway Bridge (1889)
★ Putney Bridge (Sir Joseph Bazalgette, 1886) (Phillips & Ackworth, 1729)
★ Hammersmith Bridge (Sir Joseph Bazalgette, 1887)
★ Barnes Railway Bridge (1849)
★ Chiswick Bridge (1933)
★ Kew Railway Bridge (1869)
★ Kew Bridge (John Wolfe-Barry, 1903)
★ Richmond Lock and Footbridge (1894)
★ Twickenham Bridge (1933)
★ Richmond Railway Bridge (1848)
★ Richmond Bridge (1777)
★ Teddington Lock Footbridge
★ Kingston Railway Bridge (1863)
★ Kingston Bridge (1828)
★ Hampton Court Bridge (1933)
★ Hampton Ferry (F) (1519)
★ Walton Bridge (The 1953 temporary road bridge has been for pedestrians only since 1999, vehicles use a new (1999) temporary bridge, designed to last 10 years)
★ Shepperton to Weybridge Ferry (F)
★ Chertsey Bridge (1785)
★ M3 Motorway Bridge (1971)
★ Staines Railway Bridge (1856)
★ Staines Bridge (1832)
★ Runnymede Bridge (1961) (Originally designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens for the Staines bypass; M25 motorway bridge added 1983; M25 widened 2004)
★ Albert Bridge (1928)
★ Victoria Bridge (1967)
★ Black Pott's Railway Bridge (1892)
★ Windsor Bridge (1824)
★ Windsor Railway Bridge (1849) Brunel's GWR Bridge
★ Queen Elizabeth Bridge (1966)
★ Summerleaze Footbridge (1992)
★ M4 Bridge (incorporates footbridge) (1961)
★ Maidenhead Railway Bridge (Isambard Kingdom Brunel, 1838)
★ Maidenhead Bridge (1777)
★ Cookham Bridge (1867)
★ Bourne End Railway Bridge (1895; incorporates footbridge)
★ Marlow By-pass Bridge (1972)
★ Marlow Bridge (William Tierney Clark, 1832)
★ Temple Footbridge (1989)
★ Henley Bridge (1786)
★ Shiplake Railway Bridge (1897)
★ Sonning Bridge (c.1775)
★ Caversham Lock (incorporates footbridge)
★ Reading Bridge (1923)
★ Caversham Bridge (1926)
★ Whitchurch Bridge (1902) - Toll Bridge from Whitchurch-on-Thames to Pangbourne
★ Gatehampton Railway Bridge (Isambard Kingdom Brunel, 1838)
★ Goring and Streatley Bridge (1923)
★ Moulsford Railway Bridge (Isambard Kingdom Brunel, 1838)
★ Winterbrook Bridge (1993)
★ Wallingford Bridge (1809)
★ Shillingford Bridge (1827)
★ Day's Lock Footbridge (1870)
★ Clifton Hampden Bridge (George Gilbert Scott,1867)
★ Appleford Railway Bridge (1929)
★ Culham Bridge
★ Abingdon Bridge (1416)
★ Nuneham Railway Bridge (1929)
★ Kennington Railway Bridge (1923)
★ Isis Road Bridge A4074 (1962)
★ Donnington Bridge (1962)
★ Folly Bridge (1827)
★ Oxford Footbridge
★ Osney Footbridge
★ Osney Rail Bridge
★ Osney Bridge (1885)

★ Medley Footbridge
★ Godstow Bridge (1792)
★ A34 Road Bridge
★ Swinford Toll Bridge (1777)
★ Hart's Weir Footbridge
★ Newbridge (13th century)
★ Tenfoot Bridge
★ Tadpole Bridge
★ Old Man's Bridge
★ Radcot Bridge (1787)
★ Eaton Footbridge
★ Bloomer's Hole Footbridge
★ St. John's Bridge (1886)
★ Halfpenny Bridge (James Hollingworth, 1792) - the start of the navigable Thames
★ Hannington Bridge
★ Castle Eaton Bridge
★ Water Eaton House Bridge
★ Eysey Footbridge
★ A419 Road Bridge
★ Cricklade High Bridge
★ Waterhay Bridge
★ Neigh Bridge
★ Parker's Bridge, Ewen
★ A429 Road Bridge
★ A433 Road Bridge
★ Tunnels underneath the River Thames
★ Locks on the River Thames
★ River Thames
1. ''All the 214 bridges across the Thames : together with the 17 public tunnels'', Shamus O. D. Wade, 1995
| Contents |
| North Sea to London |
| South east London |
| Central London |
| South west London |
| London to Windsor |
| Windsor to Reading |
| Reading to Oxford |
| Oxford to Cricklade |
| Beyond Cricklade |
| See also |
| References |
North Sea to London
★ ''proposed'' Lower Thames Crossing, not yet formally announced; possibly to connect the Isle of Grain in Kent with Canvey Island in Essex
★ Gravesend - Tilbury Ferry, a passenger ferry.
★ Channel Tunnel Rail Link rail tunnels from Swanscombe in Kent to West Thurrock in Essex. (Two 2.5 km tunnels, 7.15 m internal diameter.)
★ Dartford Crossing including two Dartford Tunnels (1963 and 1980) and the cable-stayed Queen Elizabeth II Bridge (1991)
★ Dartford Cable Tunnel (2003; tunnel carrying electrical cable; accessible by authorised personnel only)
★ 380kV Thames Crossing - powerline crossing at West Thurrock
South east London
★ ''proposed'' Thames Gateway Bridge, expected to be built between 2009 and 2013 to connect Beckton with Thamesmead
★ ''under construction'' Docklands Light Railway tunnel (between King George V and Woolwich Arsenal stations, expected 2009)
★ Woolwich foot tunnel (1912)
★ Woolwich Ferry
★ ''proposed'' Crossrail tunnel
★ Thames Barrier - connects the banks of the river via a service tunnel accessible by authorised personnel only.
★ ''proposed'' Silvertown Link bridge or tunnel to relieve the Blackwall Tunnels
★ Jubilee Line tunnels (between North Greenwich and Canning Town; 1999)
★ Blackwall Tunnels (Alexander Binnie, 1897; second bore 1967)
★ Jubilee Line tunnels (between Canary Wharf and North Greenwich; 1999)
★ Docklands Light Railway tunnel (between Island Gardens and Cutty Sark; 1999)
★ Greenwich foot tunnel (Alexander Binnie, 1902)
★ Jubilee Line tunnels (between Canada Water and Canary Wharf; 1999)
★ Rotherhithe Tunnel (Maurice Fitzmaurice, 1908)
★ Thames Tunnel (Wapping to Rotherhithe Tunnel) (Marc Brunel, 1843; the world's first underwater tunnel, now part of the East London Line)
Central London
★ Tower Bridge (1894)
★ Tower Subway (Peter W. Barlow and James Henry Greathead; 1870. The world's first underground tube railway, cable hauled - now used for water mains and telephone cables and not accessible)
★ Northern Line (City branch) tunnels (between London Bridge and Bank; 1900)
★ London Bridge (1973)
★ City & South London Railway tunnels (This railway's original crossing of the river between Borough and King William Street; 1890. Abandoned in 1900 when the Northern Line City branch tunnels were opened on a new alignment)
★ Cannon Street Railway Bridge (1982)
★ Southwark Bridge (1921)
★ Millennium Bridge (2002)
★ Blackfriars Railway Bridge (1886)
★ Blackfriars Bridge (1869)
★ Waterloo & City Line tunnels (between Waterloo and Bank; 1898)
★ Waterloo Bridge (1945) (the "women's bridge")
★ Northern Line (Charing Cross branch) tunnels (between Waterloo and Embankment; 1926)
★ Hungerford Footbridges (Golden Jubilee Bridges) (2002)
★ Charing Cross (Hungerford) Bridge (1864)
★ Bakerloo Line tunnels (between Waterloo and Embankment; 1906)
★ Jubilee Line tunnels (between Waterloo and Westminster; 1999)
★ Westminster Bridge (1862)
★ Lambeth Bridge (1932)
★ Vauxhall Bridge (1906)
★ Victoria Line tunnels (between Vauxhall and Pimlico; 1971)
★ Grosvenor Bridge (Victoria Railway Bridge) (1859)
South west London
★ Chelsea Bridge (1937)
★ Albert Bridge (1873)
★ Battersea Bridge (Sir Joseph Bazalgette, 1890) (Henry Holland, 1771)
★ Battersea Railway Bridge (1863)
★ Wandsworth Bridge (1938)
★ Fulham Railway Bridge (1889)
★ Putney Bridge (Sir Joseph Bazalgette, 1886) (Phillips & Ackworth, 1729)
★ Hammersmith Bridge (Sir Joseph Bazalgette, 1887)
★ Barnes Railway Bridge (1849)
★ Chiswick Bridge (1933)
★ Kew Railway Bridge (1869)
★ Kew Bridge (John Wolfe-Barry, 1903)
★ Richmond Lock and Footbridge (1894)
★ Twickenham Bridge (1933)
★ Richmond Railway Bridge (1848)
★ Richmond Bridge (1777)
★ Teddington Lock Footbridge
★ Kingston Railway Bridge (1863)
★ Kingston Bridge (1828)
★ Hampton Court Bridge (1933)
★ Hampton Ferry (F) (1519)
London to Windsor
★ Walton Bridge (The 1953 temporary road bridge has been for pedestrians only since 1999, vehicles use a new (1999) temporary bridge, designed to last 10 years)
★ Shepperton to Weybridge Ferry (F)
★ Chertsey Bridge (1785)
★ M3 Motorway Bridge (1971)
★ Staines Railway Bridge (1856)
★ Staines Bridge (1832)
★ Runnymede Bridge (1961) (Originally designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens for the Staines bypass; M25 motorway bridge added 1983; M25 widened 2004)
★ Albert Bridge (1928)
★ Victoria Bridge (1967)
★ Black Pott's Railway Bridge (1892)
★ Windsor Bridge (1824)
★ Windsor Railway Bridge (1849) Brunel's GWR Bridge
★ Queen Elizabeth Bridge (1966)
Windsor to Reading
★ Summerleaze Footbridge (1992)
★ M4 Bridge (incorporates footbridge) (1961)
★ Maidenhead Railway Bridge (Isambard Kingdom Brunel, 1838)
★ Maidenhead Bridge (1777)
★ Cookham Bridge (1867)
★ Bourne End Railway Bridge (1895; incorporates footbridge)
★ Marlow By-pass Bridge (1972)
★ Marlow Bridge (William Tierney Clark, 1832)
★ Temple Footbridge (1989)
★ Henley Bridge (1786)
★ Shiplake Railway Bridge (1897)
★ Sonning Bridge (c.1775)
★ Caversham Lock (incorporates footbridge)
★ Reading Bridge (1923)
★ Caversham Bridge (1926)
Reading to Oxford
★ Whitchurch Bridge (1902) - Toll Bridge from Whitchurch-on-Thames to Pangbourne
★ Gatehampton Railway Bridge (Isambard Kingdom Brunel, 1838)
★ Goring and Streatley Bridge (1923)
★ Moulsford Railway Bridge (Isambard Kingdom Brunel, 1838)
★ Winterbrook Bridge (1993)
★ Wallingford Bridge (1809)
★ Shillingford Bridge (1827)
★ Day's Lock Footbridge (1870)
★ Clifton Hampden Bridge (George Gilbert Scott,1867)
★ Appleford Railway Bridge (1929)
★ Culham Bridge
★ Abingdon Bridge (1416)
★ Nuneham Railway Bridge (1929)
★ Kennington Railway Bridge (1923)
★ Isis Road Bridge A4074 (1962)
★ Donnington Bridge (1962)
★ Folly Bridge (1827)
★ Oxford Footbridge
★ Osney Footbridge
★ Osney Rail Bridge
★ Osney Bridge (1885)
Oxford to Cricklade
St. John's Bridge, Lechlade.
★ Medley Footbridge
★ Godstow Bridge (1792)
★ A34 Road Bridge
★ Swinford Toll Bridge (1777)
★ Hart's Weir Footbridge
★ Newbridge (13th century)
★ Tenfoot Bridge
★ Tadpole Bridge
★ Old Man's Bridge
★ Radcot Bridge (1787)
★ Eaton Footbridge
★ Bloomer's Hole Footbridge
★ St. John's Bridge (1886)
★ Halfpenny Bridge (James Hollingworth, 1792) - the start of the navigable Thames
★ Hannington Bridge
★ Castle Eaton Bridge
★ Water Eaton House Bridge
★ Eysey Footbridge
★ A419 Road Bridge
★ Cricklade High Bridge
Beyond Cricklade
★ Waterhay Bridge
★ Neigh Bridge
★ Parker's Bridge, Ewen
★ A429 Road Bridge
★ A433 Road Bridge
See also
★ Tunnels underneath the River Thames
★ Locks on the River Thames
★ River Thames
References
1. ''All the 214 bridges across the Thames : together with the 17 public tunnels'', Shamus O. D. Wade, 1995
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