Vauxhall Bridge is a
Grade II* listed steel and granite
deck arch bridge in central
London
. It crosses the River
Thames in a south-east north-west direction between Vauxhall
on the south
bank and Westminster
on the north bank. Opened in 1906, it
replaced an earlier bridge, originally known as Regent Bridge but
later renamed Vauxhall Bridge, built between 1809 and 1816 as part
of a scheme for redeveloping the south bank of the Thames. The
original bridge was itself built on the site of a former
ferry.
The building of both bridges was problematic, with both the first
and second bridges requiring several redesigns from multiple
architects. The original bridge, the first iron bridge over the
Thames, was built by a private company and operated as a
toll bridge before being taken into public
ownership in 1879. The second bridge, which took eight years to
build, was the first in London to carry
trams
and later one of the first two roads in London to have a
bus lane.
In 1963 it was proposed to replace the bridge with a modern
development containing seven floors of shops, office space, hotel
rooms and leisure facilities supported above the river, but the
plans were abandoned because of costs. With the exception of
alterations to the road layout and the
balustrade, the design and appearance of the
current bridge has remained almost unchanged since 1907.
The bridge
today is an important part of London's road system and carries the
A202
road
across the Thames.
Background
In the
early 13th century, Anglo-Norman
mercenary Falkes de Breauté
built a manor house in the then empty marshlands of South Lambeth
, across the River
Thames from Westminster
. In 1223–24, de Breauté and others revolted
against Henry III; following a
failed attempt to seize the Tower of London
, de Breauté's lands in England were forfeited and
he was forced into exile in France and later Rome. The lands
surrounding his Lambeth manor house continued to be known as
Falkes' Hall, later Vauxhall.
.png/280px-Rocque_Vauxhall_and_Westminster_(cropped).png)
Westminster & Lambeth, 1746.
Westminster Bridge, opened in 1740, connects Westminster to
Lambeth; Huntley Ferry crosses the river on the site of the future
Vauxhall Bridge.
With the
exception of housing around the New Spring Gardens
(later Vauxhall Gardens) pleasure park, opened in
around 1661, the land at Vauxhall remained sparsely populated into
the 19th century, with the nearest fixed river crossings being the
bridges at Westminster
, downstream, and Battersea
, upstream. In 1806 a scheme was proposed by Ralph Dodd to open the south bank of the Thames
for development, by building a new major road from Hyde Park
Corner
to Kennington
and Greenwich
, crossing the river upstream of the existing
Westminster
Bridge
. The proprietors of Battersea Bridge,
concerned about a potential loss of customers, petitioned
Parliament against the scheme, stating that "[Dodd] is a well known
adventurer and Speculist, and the projector of numerous
undertakings upon a large scale most if not all of which have
failed", and the bill was abandoned.
In 1809 a new bill was presented to Parliament, and the proprietors
of Battersea Bridge agreed to allow it to pass and to accept
compensation. The Bill incorporated the Vauxhall Bridge Company,
allowing it to raise up to £300,000 (about £ as of ) by means of
mortgages or the sale of shares, and to keep all profits from any
tolls raised. From these profits, the Vauxhall Bridge Company was
obliged to compensate the proprietors of Battersea Bridge for any
drop in revenue caused by the new bridge.
Old Vauxhall Bridge
Dodd submitted a scheme for a bridge at Vauxhall of 13 arches.
However, soon after the 1809 Act was passed, he was dismissed by
the Vauxhall Bridge Company and his design was abandoned.
John Rennie was commissioned to design
and build the new bridge, and a stone bridge of seven arches was
approved. On 9 May 1811,
Lord Dundas laid the
foundation stone of the bridge on the northern bank.
The Vauxhall Bridge Company ran into financial difficulties and was
unable to raise more than the £300,000 stipulated in the 1809 Act,
and a new Act was passed in 1812 permitting the Company to build a
cheaper iron bridge. Rennie submitted a new design for an iron
bridge of eleven spans, costing far less than the original stone
design. Rennie's design was rejected, and instead construction
began on a nine arch iron bridge designed by
Samuel Bentham. Concerns were raised about
the construction of the
piers,
and engineer
James Walker
was appointed to inspect the work. Walker's report led to the
design being abandoned for the second time, and Walker himself was
appointed to design and build a bridge of nine cast-iron arches
with stone piers, the first iron bridge to be built across the
Thames.

Regent Bridge shortly after
opening
On 4 June 1816, over five years after construction began, the
bridge opened, initially named Regent Bridge after
George, Prince Regent but
shortly afterwards renamed Vauxhall Bridge. The developers failed
to pay the agreed compensation to the owners of Battersea Bridge
and were taken to court; after a legal dispute lasting five years a
judgement was made in favour of Battersea Bridge, with Vauxhall
Bridge being obliged to pay £8,234 (about £ as of ) compensation.
As well as the compensation awarded by the courts to Battersea
Bridge in 1821, the 1809 Act also obliged the Vauxhall Bridge
Company to pay compensation to the operators of Huntley Ferry, the
Sunday ferry service to Vauxhall Gardens, with the level to be
decided by "a jury of 24 honest, sufficient and indifferent men".
The bridge cost £175,000 (about £ as of ) to build; with the costs
of approach roads and compensation payments, the total cost came to
£297,000 (about £ as of ).
Usage

Vauxhall Bridge in 1829
In anticipation of the areas surrounding the bridge becoming
prosperous suburbs, tolls were set at relatively high rates on a
sliding scale, ranging from a
penny for pedestrians to
2
s 6
d for vehicles drawn by six
horses. Exemptions were granted for mail coaches, soldiers on duty
and parliamentary candidates during election campaigns. However,
the area around the bridge failed to develop as expected. In 1815
John Doulton built the
Doulton & Watts (later Royal Doulton)
stoneware factory at Vauxhall, and consequently instead of the
wealthy residents anticipated by the company, the area began to
fill with narrow streets of working class
tenements to house the factory's workers.
Meanwhile,
the large Millbank
Penitentiary
was built near the northern end of the bridge,
discouraging housing development. Consequently, toll
revenues were initially lower than expected, and the dividends paid
to investors were low.

Vauxhall Bridge and Nine Elms station
in 1847
Usage rose
considerably in 1838 when the terminus of the London and South Western
Railway was built at nearby Nine
Elms
. Nine Elms station proved inconvenient and
unpopular with travellers, and in 1848 a new railway terminus was
built closer to central London, at Waterloo
Bridge station
(renamed "Waterloo Station" in 1886), and the
terminus at Nine Elms was abandoned.
With the closure of the rail terminus, Vauxhall Bridge's main
source of revenue was visitors to the Vauxhall Gardens pleasure
park. In addition to people visiting the Gardens themselves,
Vauxhall Gardens were used as a launch point for
hot air balloon flights, and large crowds
would gather on the bridge and surrounding streets to watch the
flights.
A large crowd also assembled on the bridge
in September 1844 to watch Mister Barry, a clown from Astley's Amphitheatre
, sail from Vauxhall Bridge to Westminster
Bridge
in a washtub towed by
geese.
Public ownership
Despite
early setbacks and the construction nearby in the 19th century of
three competing bridges (Lambeth Bridge
, Chelsea
Bridge
and Albert Bridge
), the rapid urban growth of London made Vauxhall
Bridge very profitable. The annual income from tolls rose
from £4,977 (about £ as of ) in its first full year of operation,
to £62,392 (about £ as of ) in 1877.
In 1877 the Metropolis Toll Bridges Act
was passed, allowing the Metropolitan Board of Works
(MBW) to buy all London bridges between Hammersmith
Bridge
and Waterloo Bridge
and free them from tolls.
In 1879 the bridge was bought by the MBW for £255,000 (about £ as
of ) and tolls on the bridge were lifted. Inspections of the bridge
by the MBW following the purchase found that the two central piers
were badly eroded, exposing the timber cradles on which the piers
rested. Large quantities of cement in bags were laid around the
wooden cradles as an emergency measure; however, the cement bags
themselves soon washed away. The piers were removed, replaced by a
single large central arch. By this time the bridge was in very poor
condition, and in 1895 the
London
County Council (LCC), which had taken over from the MBW in
1889, sought and gained Parliamentary approval to replace the
bridge. Permission was granted by Parliament to raise the projected
replacement costs of £484,000 (about £ as of ) from
rates across the whole of London rather than
only local residents, as a new bridge was considered to be of
benefit to the whole of London.
In August 1898 a temporary wooden bridge was moved into place
alongside the existing bridge, and the demolition of the old bridge
began.
New Vauxhall Bridge
The London County Council's resident engineer,
Sir Alexander Binnie, submitted a design
for a steel bridge, which proved unpopular. At the request of the
LCC, Binnie submitted a new design for a bridge of five spans, to
be built in concrete and faced with granite.
Work on Binnie's design began, but was beset by problems. Leading
architects condemned the design, with
Arthur Beresford Pite describing it as
"a would-be Gothic architectural form of great vulgarity and stupid
want of meaning", and
T G
Jackson describing the bridge designs as a sign of "the utter
apparent indifference of those in authority to the matter of art".
Plans to
build large stone abutments had to be
suspended when it was found that the southern abutment would block
the River
Effra
, which by this time had been diverted underground
to serve as a storm relief sewer and which flowed into the Thames
at this point. The Effra had to be rerouted to join the
Thames to the north of the bridge. After the construction of the
foundations and piers it was then discovered that the clay of the
riverbed at this point would not be able to support the weight of a
concrete bridge. With the granite piers already in place, it was
decided to build a steel
superstructure onto the existing piers, and a
superstructure long and wide was designed by Binnie and
Maurice Fitzmaurice and built by LCC
engineers at a cost of £437,000 (about £ as of ).
The new bridge was eventually opened on 26 May 1906, five years
behind schedule, in a ceremony presided over by the
Prince of Wales and
Evan Spicer, Chairman of the LCC. Charles Wall,
who had won the contract to build the superstructure of the new
bridge, paid the LCC £50 for the temporary wooden bridge,
comprising of timber and 580
tons of scrap
metal.
Sculpture
The new bridge was built to a starkly functional design, and many
influential architects had complained about the lack of
consultation from any architects during the design process by the
engineers designing the new bridge. In 1903, during the
construction of the bridge, the LCC consulted with architect
William Edward Riley regarding
possible decorative elements that could be added to the bridge.
Riley proposed erecting two
pylons topped with statues at one end
of the bridge, and adding decorative sculpture to the bridge piers.
The pylons were rejected on grounds of cost, but following further
consultation with leading architect
Richard Norman Shaw it was decided to
erect monumental bronze statues above the piers, and
Alfred Drury,
George
Frampton and
Frederick Pomeroy
were appointed to design appropriate statues.

Pomeroy's
Agriculture
Frampton resigned from the project through pressure of work, and
Drury and Pomeroy carried out the project, each contributing four
monumental statues, which were installed in late 1907. On the
upstream piers are Pomeroy's
Agriculture,
Architecture,
Engineering and
Pottery,
whilst on the downstream piers are Drury's
Science,
Fine Arts,
Local Government and
Education. Each statue weighs approximately two
tons. Despite their size, the statues are
little-noticed by users of the bridge as they are not visible from
the bridge itself, but only from the river banks or from passing
shipping.
Usage
The new
bridge soon became a major transport artery and today carries the
A202
across the
Thames. Originally built with
tram
tracks, New Vauxhall Bridge was the first in central London to
carry
trams. Initially it carried horse-drawn
trams, but shortly after the bridge's opening it was converted to
carry the electric trams of
London County Council
Tramways; it continued to carry trams until the ending of tram
services in 1951.
In 1968 Vauxhall Bridge and Park
Lane
became the first roads in London to have bus lanes; during weekday evening rush hours, the
central lane of the bridge was reserved for southbound buses
only.
Millbank Bridge
During the
Second World War the
government was concerned that Axis bombers would target the bridge,
and a temporary bridge known as Millbank Bridge was built parallel
to Vauxhall Bridge, downstream. Millbank Bridge was built of steel
girders supported by wooden stakes; however, despite its flimsy
appearance it was a sturdy structure, capable of supporting
tanks and other heavy military equipment. In
the event, Vauxhall Bridge survived the war undamaged, and in 1948
Millbank Bridge was dismantled.
Its girders were shipped to Northern
Rhodesia
and used to span a tributary of the Zambezi
.
The Crystal Span
In 1963
the Glass Age
Development Committee commissioned a design for a replacement
bridge at Vauxhall, inspired by the design of the Crystal
Palace
, to be called the Crystal Span. The Crystal
Span was to have been a seven story building supported by two piers
in the river, overhanging the river banks at either end. The
structure itself would have been enclosed in an air conditioned
glass shell. The lowest floor would have contained two three-lane
carriageways for vehicles, with a layer of shops and a skating rink
in the centre of the upper floors.
The southern end of the upper floors was
to house a luxury hotel, whilst the northern end was to house the
modern art collection of the nearby Tate Gallery
, which at this time was suffering from a severe
shortage of display space. The roof was to have housed a
series of roof gardens, observation platforms and courtyards,
surrounding a large open air theatre. The entire structure would
have been long and wide. Despite much public interest in the
proposals, the London County Council was reluctant to pay the
estimated £7 million (£ as of ) construction costs, and the scheme
was abandoned.
Recent history
In 1993, the earliest known bridge-like structure in London was
discovered alongside Vauxhall Bridge, when shifting currents washed
away a layer of silt which had covered it. Dating to between
1550 BC and 300 BC, it consists of two rows of wooden
posts, which it is believed would originally have carried a deck of
some kind. It is believed that it did not cross the whole river,
but instead ran to an island in the river, possibly used for burial
of the dead. As no mention of this or similar structures in the
area is made in
Julius Caesar's
account of crossing the Thames nor by any other Roman author, it is
presumed that the structure had been dismantled or destroyed prior
to Caesar's expedition to Britain in 55 BC. The posts are
still visible at extreme low tides.

Downstream view of Vauxhall Bridge in
2009
Following the closure of a number of the area's industries, in the
1970s and 1980s the land at the southern end of Vauxhall Bridge
remained empty, following the failures of multiple redevelopment
schemes. The most notable came in 1979 when
Keith Wickenden MP, owner of the land at the
immediate southern end of the bridge, proposed a large-scale
redevelopment of the site. The development was to contain of office
space, 100 luxury
flats and a gallery to
house the Tate Gallery's modern art collection. The offices were to
be housed in a tower of green glass, which was nicknamed the "Green
Giant" and met with much opposition. The then
Secretary of State for
the Environment,
Michael
Heseltine, refused permission for the development and the site
remained empty.
In 1988
Regalian Properties
purchased the site, and appointed
Terry Farrell as architect.
Farrell designed a self-contained community of shops, housing,
offices and public spaces for the site. Regalian disliked the
proposals and requested Farrell design a single large office block.
Despite containing 50% more office space than the rejected Green
Giant proposal, the design was accepted.
The government then
bought the site and design as a future headquarters for the
Secret
Intelligence Service
, and the design was accordingly modified to
increase security. In 1995 the SIS Building
was opened on the site, and today dominates other
buildings in the vicinity of the bridge.
In 2004
the Vauxhall Cross area at the
southern end of the bridge was redeveloped as a major transport
interchange, combining a large bus
station with the existing National
Rail and London Underground
stations at Vauxhall
. Immediately to the east of the southern end
of the bridge, a
slipway provides access for
amphibious buses between the road and
river.
The only significant alteration to the structure of the bridge
itself since the addition of the sculptures in 1907 came in 1973,
when the
Greater London
Council (GLC) decided to add an extra traffic lane by reducing
the width of the pavements. To counter the increased load of extra
traffic, the GLC announced the replacement of the cast-iron
balustrades with low box-girder
structures. Despite formal objections from both Lambeth and
Westminster Councils, the GLC ignored the objections, giving the
bridge the appearance it has today. The bridge was declared a
Grade II* listed structure in 2008,
providing protection to preserve its character from further
alteration.
Notes and references
- Notes
- References
- Bibliography