English: The
skew bridge constructed at
Rainhill to take the 1753 Liverpool and Warrington turnpike road (now the
A57) over the
Liverpool and Manchester Railway.
The road crosses at an angle of 34° to the perpendicular, with a span of 54英尺(16.4米) compared to a distance across the track of 30英尺(914.4厘米). The thrust lines of a conventionally built arch would therefore fall outside the bridge abutments on either side, making it unstable. The solution is to lay the bricks forming the arch at an angle to the abutments on either side. This technique, which results in a spiral effect in the arch masonry, provides extra strength in the arch to compensate for the angled abutments; but it also meant that each masonry block had to be individually and expensively cut to its own unique shape, with no two edges either parallel or perpendicular. Experience of building such arches was very limited in 1829, and it is said that a wooden model (full-sized according to some accounts) was constructed in an adjacent field to guide the masons.
The bridge, which was later widened, remains in use (cf this
contemporary picture), adjacent to
Rainhill railway station. It is recognised as a Grade II
listed structure.