William Walter Mason Bridge

The William Walter Mason Memorial Bridge (also known as Barron River Bridge[2]) is a road bridge that carries the Captain Cook Highway across the Barron River in Stratford, Queensland, Australia.

William Walter Mason Bridge
Coordinates16°52′08″S 145°44′10″E
CarriesCaptain Cook Highway
(Motor vehicles)
CrossesBarron River
LocaleStratford, Queensland, Australia
Official nameWilliam Walter Mason Memorial Bridge
Other name(s)Barron River Bridge
Maintained byDepartment of Transport and Main Roads
Characteristics
DesignBeam bridge
MaterialPrestressed concrete
Total length176 metres (577 ft)
Clearance below4.1 metres (13 ft)
History
Opened
  • Southbound bridge (16 December 1977 (1977-12-16))
  • Northbound bridge (1988)
Replaces
  • Farmers’ Bridge (1921-1929)
  • Stratford Bridge (1934-1978)[1]

The first Barron River Bridge was built by John Holland Constructions in 1977. On 12 August 1978 it was named after William Walter Mason, the first settler who bought land on the north side of the Barron River in 1882.

The first bridge was converted to southbound traffic after the second northbound bridge was built in 1988 as part of the highway duplication project. Both bridges are known as the William Walter Mason Bridges.

References

  1. "Stratford Heritage Trail" (PDF). Stratford Community Association. Retrieved 16 March 2011.
  2. "Major Works Between Machans Beach Roundabout and Barron River Bridge". Department of Transport and Main Roads. Retrieved 16 March 2011.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.