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New ‘smart bridge’ over River Wear to encourage walking and cycling in Sunderland

The pedestrian and cycling bridge, which is scheduled for completion in 2024, will include cutting-edge technological features such as augmented reality

Design and engineering firm Arup will lead the design of a new £31 million cycling and pedestrian ‘smart bridge’ crossing the River Wear in Sunderland.

Arup will work alongside construction company VolkerStevin to deliver the bridge by 2024, as part of Sunderland City Council’s ambition to increase walking and cycling in and around Riverside Park, a new sustainable regeneration project in the city’s industrial area.

The bridge will provide connectivity between Sheepfolds and the city centre, completing the Keel Line connection between Keel Square and the Stadium of Light, the home of Sunderland FC, university facilities and residential communities north of the river.

The Keel Line forms part of Sunderland City Council’s attempt to encourage walking and cycling in and across the city through the creation of fully accessible paths and cycle routes.

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Using 3D modelling, the bridge will be designed and built with the aim of minimising its carbon footprint and impact on local biodiversity, during and after the construction process.

As a so-called ‘smart bridge’, it will feature interactive experiences for walkers and cyclists as they cross, including augmented reality displays. The design will also implement creative lighting to illuminate the green spaces below.

Rachel Hurdman, Arup’s project manager, said: “This is an important project for the local area and an exemplar of sustainable, people-focused design. Our design and engineering experts will be leading the design process with cutting-edge design and engineering to provide a new strategic link for the people of Sunderland.”

In October and November 2021, Sunderland City Council held a consultation on its new Local Cycling and Walking Infrastructure Plan (LCWIP). The LCWIP aims to improve active travel opportunities in Sunderland by a creating a new network of cycling and walking routes, as part of the government’s aim to double cycling journeys in the UK by 2025.

Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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12 comments

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Captain Badger | 2 years ago
10 likes

Smart bridges eh? Hopefully we'll get some smart trolls to go with them. The ones we get around here seem to be as thick as mince....

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Jimwill replied to Captain Badger | 2 years ago
3 likes

If you all quit feeding him maybe he'll fuck off back to the bridge that he crawled from under

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Captain Badger replied to Jimwill | 2 years ago
3 likes
Jimwill wrote:

If you all quit feeding him maybe he'll fuck off back to the bridge that he crawled from under

Oh I agree entirely old boy, I haven't spoken to them for months.
They're still here though.....

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marmotte27 | 2 years ago
3 likes

Not sure we need 'augmented reality' just now. How about politics started to take into account actual reality* first?

*like a transport system that is dangerous and not fit for purpose, climate catastrophe and such like

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chrisonabike replied to marmotte27 | 2 years ago
1 like

marmotte27 wrote:

Not sure we need 'augmented reality' just now. How about politics started to take into account actual reality* first?

*like a transport system that is dangerous and not fit for purpose, climate catastrophe and such like

Ultimately I put this down to human nature e.g. attraction to new / shiny / "big" things, wanting distraction, ignoring the boring / difficult stuff.  Wants, not needs.

It often seems to be the case that it's impossible to find lots of small sums of money for lots of standard, dutiful bits of infra but you can do one or two hugely expensive one-off projects. (So also Big Bung theory - to "generate" money or move it you need a large concentration of it so that those involved can take a bigger cut). This goes along with a lack of focus on the "ongoing" side e.g. having a plan and money for continued use.  So maintenance and maybe even what happens when something comes to end-of-life.

We don't just want bridges - we want cool bridges, novel bridges, bridges with new features, award-winning record-breaking world's-most-expensive better-than-the-rest bridges etc. See "exceptional infrastructure" (also here).

So unless you can generate excitement in others - especially those with influence / money, who tend to be excited by... money - usually it won't happen.

What we need is lots of well-designed but simple and standard infra.  Well designed because making things simple is really hard to get right.  Standard because people make better decisions when they understand the environment.  It's easier to learn something if you encounter it repeatedly.

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chrisonabike replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
0 likes

Example of "expensive but dumb":

Copenhagen - expensive, "cool" bridge - with a really silly - nay dangerous - section on it.

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eburtthebike | 2 years ago
3 likes

"As a so-called ‘smart bridge’, it will feature interactive experiences for walkers and cyclists as they cross, including augmented reality displays."

They seem to have mistaken the function of a bridge, and won't those "experiences" be somewhat distracting?  A bridge goes over some obstacle, enabling movement from one place to another, and while it might be fun to have interactive experiences on the way, maybe they might be better away from a transport corridor.

£31m seems a pretty large sum for a cycling/walking bridge, so how much of the cost is for the experiences, and how much for the actual bridge?  I won't say that it's a waste of money, but in these straitened times, if I was a local taxpayer, I'd be making sure my politicians looked very hard at the costings for this.

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Creakingcrank replied to eburtthebike | 2 years ago
1 like

Sounds like a bargain. An earlier Arup bridge needed a year and an extra £5m to make it less exciting to cross.

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mdavidford replied to eburtthebike | 2 years ago
1 like

Yes - rather than encouraging walking and cycling, it sounds more like it'll encourage stopping and hanging around and getting in the way of people trying to cycle and walk. Which is fine, if what you're going for is some kind of installation / tourist attraction, but not so much if you're viewing it as part of your transport strategy.

Instead of all that, they could just paint it rainbow stripes.

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IanGlasgow replied to eburtthebike | 2 years ago
3 likes

It's interesting what bridges cost.
At first £31m doesn't seem excessive - Glasgow City Council are about to spend a similar sum on a pedestrian/cycling bridge across the Clyde at Govan.
A much smaller bridge across the canal at SotckingFiled Junction is costing £14m.

However, the Stockingfield design was chosen because the previously plannned "Big Man Bridge" was deemed too expensive at an estimated cost of £4.5m. We seem to be spending an extra £10m on a cheaper bridge!?
The Clyde Arc (or Squinty Bridge as everyone calls it) carries 4 lanes of traffic and only cost £20m (amdittedly it broke within a couple of weeks of opening).
The Tradeston Bridge (or Squiggly Bridge as it's known), which is pedestrians and cycles only, cost less than £7m - the previous design by Richard Rodgers was going to cost £60m. That's a pretty significant saving!

 

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KDee replied to eburtthebike | 2 years ago
1 like

For augmented reality, read "targeted advertising". Gotta pay for that funky new bridge somehow.

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brooksby replied to eburtthebike | 2 years ago
1 like

eburtthebike wrote:

They seem to have mistaken the function of a bridge, and won't those "experiences" be somewhat distracting?  A bridge goes over some obstacle, enabling movement from one place to another, and while it might be fun to have interactive experiences on the way, maybe they might be better away from a transport corridor.

Maybe they took their inspiration from Johnson's proposed Garden Bridge...

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