The 26 Year Old Temporary Bridge - A128 Chipping Ongar Essex

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  • @chrisshelley3027
    @chrisshelley3027 Год назад +379

    The note must have outlasted several fridges, that bridge really is a fridge too far.

  • @SamLyndonShow
    @SamLyndonShow Год назад +71

    "...as quickly as they could, over the course of 7 years..."
    Haha. I love your delivery

    • @Idylla
      @Idylla Год назад +1

      Almost spat my food out at this line!

  • @ilovex1981
    @ilovex1981 Год назад +236

    Just when thought I'd been marked safe from any more of those effing awful "Elf On a Shelf" variants, Jon comes along with a blinder. Bridge on a Fridge. Top marks, sir.

    • @kirkhamandy
      @kirkhamandy Год назад +15

      Jon... pin this comment! 😂

    • @tardismole
      @tardismole Год назад +2

      LOL. Get pinned. It deserves it.

    • @markwright3161
      @markwright3161 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@tardismole It is pinned...
      .
      .
      .
      ...on the fridge for further review :)

    • @tardismole
      @tardismole 9 месяцев назад

      @@markwright3161 LOL :D

  • @chmarr
    @chmarr Год назад +173

    in 1970 a tempory bridge was installed in my town, this bridge was "reviewed" every 5 years and the same excuse "theres no money left, here have this £15 million art centre that will only be used for 8 months", the bridge collapsed in 2013 and the council suddenly had the money for the bridge .... except the bridge now costs 12x the price, 18 months and £41 million later .... we got a brand new 22 foot long suspention bridge .... which had to be replaced 6 months later as it could not even hold a 7 ton truck without it flexing out of its joints, a further £22 million was spent in replacing it with a solid bridge, so there you have it, use a temp bridge for to long and it'll end up costing £63 million quid

    • @leopoldbluesky
      @leopoldbluesky Год назад +10

      Blimey - where was that?

    • @jovetj
      @jovetj Год назад +4

      Oh my God! And I thought American bureaucracy was bad...

    • @mrcaboosevg6089
      @mrcaboosevg6089 Год назад +2

      @@jovetj This is a case of incompetency rather than bureaucracy, every single council in the UK is the same. People vote for a party, they have no idea who they're giving power so 9 times out of 10 it ends up being some moron that hasn't got a clue what they're doing

    • @jovetj
      @jovetj Год назад +1

      @@mrcaboosevg6089 Sounds like bureaucracy to me! 😁

    • @chmarr
      @chmarr 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@mrcaboosevg6089 it was a labour council which became a tory/labour coalition

  • @Daniel-tl6hx
    @Daniel-tl6hx 6 месяцев назад +1

    I’ve lived in Chipping Ongar my whole life and have only just learnt about this thanks to this video

  • @timpage3142
    @timpage3142 Год назад +8

    "As quickly as they could over the course of 7 years". Just brilliant!

  • @MrPeach71
    @MrPeach71 Год назад +90

    The Lewisham Rail Crash in Dec 1957 destroyed the bridge that carried the Nunhead to Lewisham line over the lines out of London Bridge.
    Over the following month, they built a temporary "Bailey Bridge" to get things going again.
    Still there. Still being used 66 years later.

    • @jaycotto26
      @jaycotto26 Год назад +2

      Simular story in walton on trent.

    • @tonys1636
      @tonys1636 Год назад +8

      Anything built not intended to be permanent is therefore temporary no matter how long it is there. The Eiffel Tower was not intended to be permanent nor was the Crystal Palace but that was moved.

    • @Assimilator1
      @Assimilator1 Год назад +2

      😮

    • @MrPeach71
      @MrPeach71 Год назад +4

      @@tonys1636 indeed. Although Stonehenge may have been designed as a temporary structure, I'm not sure the Pyramids were.

  • @Eric_L456
    @Eric_L456 Год назад +26

    At Langwathby near penrith the stone bridge was washed away in 1968 and replaced by a second hand girder bridge (it was about 10 years old) . You’ve guessed right: it’s still there 56 years later. It’s what councils do: waste money on vanity projects while important things get sidelined. Great video!

    • @iandickinson6400
      @iandickinson6400 Год назад +4

      You beat me to it.

    • @Eric_L456
      @Eric_L456 Год назад +2

      @@iandickinson6400 you’ll know all about the history of Langwathby bridge then!

    • @iandickinson6400
      @iandickinson6400 Год назад +2

      @@Eric_L456 yes I've been over plenty of times. It does its job but a replacement for the original is long overdue lol.

    • @pedanticradiator
      @pedanticradiator Год назад +1

      The bridge itself dates from WW2 it was at an army camp near Keswick before moving to Langwathby

    • @Eric_L456
      @Eric_L456 Год назад +1

      @@pedanticradiator I think the bridge was first used at Portinscale near Keswick after the original bridge there was washed away in about 1958 .

  • @nemo6686
    @nemo6686 Год назад +56

    I love how public bodies play the game of planning permission, knowing they can get endless waivers not available to the public they ostensibly serve.

    • @pwithnall
      @pwithnall Год назад +1

      It’s a bit different, though, given that the bridge is a public good, available for the public to use. It’s not like they’re getting a waiver for planning permission on something private.

    • @nemo6686
      @nemo6686 Год назад +2

      @@pwithnall It's only different because *you* have chosen to categorize it that way, and because 'public good, private bad' is subjective. Does a supermarket deliver any "good, available for the public to use" or is it only poor-value goods delivered by incompetent people that qualify as 'public'?
      And how exactly does endless derogation from the law benefit the public when it's elected buffoons but not when it's someone with merit?

  • @PenryMMJ
    @PenryMMJ Год назад +58

    You have to look at this one objectively though. Every 5 years the council has to draw up a justification for extending the temporary planning permission. They have to apply to their own planning department for that permission. They have to assess it. They have to have a planning review meeting. They have to check that the structure of the bridge will last the duration of the proposed temporary extension. They have to draw up an action plan for replacing the temporary bridge with a permanent one. And then 5 years further on they have to do the same thing again. And again, And again. It's no wonder they haven't got any money. 😁

    • @WindyJAMiller
      @WindyJAMiller Год назад +5

      Those government jobs need justifying somehow!

    • @blastaway1784
      @blastaway1784 Год назад +3

      Sounds a lot like the Post Office. Maybe they could all send themselves to jail?

    • @jovetj
      @jovetj Год назад +1

      Oh, the poor darlings. I feel soooo sorry for them! Not.
      I mean, props to someone for making a five year -mission- bridge sturdy enough to last over 5 times that long. But, still.

    • @stuinNorway
      @stuinNorway Год назад +4

      Sounds like their “review and report” procedure is “Find last report, delete date with tippex, and replace with current date, and photocopy it”

  • @15Alex92
    @15Alex92 Год назад +1

    Well I drive over that daily, never knew it was temporary or even knew there was an original structure there. Learn something new everyday! Thanks!

  • @LeeCorne
    @LeeCorne Год назад +92

    A prime example of when the temporary solution becomes the permanent solution - all too familiar in the IT world 🤦

    • @roderickmain9697
      @roderickmain9697 Год назад +11

      In my programming life I was aware that there was always time to hash something up and do the proper thing later and later never happened. After I learnt this I resisted all the "just do it quick for now" requests.

    • @JohnSmithShields
      @JohnSmithShields Год назад +3

      Bodging is an artform.

    • @zebo-the-fat
      @zebo-the-fat Год назад +2

      If I remember correctly, income tax was a temporary tax to fund the napolionic wars

    • @KalmLevi
      @KalmLevi Год назад +5

      "There is nothing as permanent as a temporary fix"

    • @Deltic55-mw4bo
      @Deltic55-mw4bo Год назад +5

      And on British Railways, I'm looking at you HSTs and Pacers.

  • @Thoringer
    @Thoringer Год назад +74

    There was an East German saying: "Nothing in this country lasts longer than a temporary fix."
    PS: Temporary fix is one of the few times where it is shorter in German: "Porvisorium"

    • @danielfield2570
      @danielfield2570 Год назад +14

      There is the adage in English of “There is nothing more permanent than a temporary solution”

    • @gelber_kaktus
      @gelber_kaktus Год назад +3

      thats acutally a russian saying.

    • @Thoringer
      @Thoringer Год назад +9

      @@gelber_kaktus or - and hear me out there - it exists in many languages! MIND BLOWN!
      "Nichts haelt laenger als ein Provisorium" does not sound very Russian to me.

    • @A_Haunted_Pancake
      @A_Haunted_Pancake Год назад +3

      Shockingly to (hopefully) few, "Provisorium" is actually a word from Latin
      and I bet ancient Romans also already had a saying like that 😄

    • @1258-Eckhart
      @1258-Eckhart Год назад +1

      "Nichts hält länger als ein Provisorium."

  • @philcoogan7369
    @philcoogan7369 Год назад +6

    What about the A686 Bridge over the river Eden near Langwathby in Cumbria the temporary bridge that was put up to solve the problem of a bridge collapse in 1968 is still there still one lane only controled by traffic lights.

  • @stephenmayo8505
    @stephenmayo8505 Год назад +25

    We've had temporary traffic lights in the middle of Chapel en le Frith, Derbyshire for at least 5 years now. Put up because of a bulging wall in a house that was "in imminent danger of collapse." Still hasn't collapsed, mind you and the bulge has been there, never changing, in this 18th Century cottage for at least my 55 years on this planet. But obviously the Council knows best... apparently.

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 Год назад +3

      There's been a set of "temporary" traffic lights on a bridge over the A12 near Witham (Essex again!) for over eight years, now.

    • @RichardCeeA38
      @RichardCeeA38 Год назад +1

      There has been a set of temporary traffic lights outside Dartmoor Prison in Princetown Devon longer than inmates have been in there.

  • @chriswall4795
    @chriswall4795 Год назад +3

    A "Mechano" bridge was first installed over the Ivel at Biggleswade in 1939. Replacement began in 1999, not completed until 2001 ... an impressive 60-plus years later!

  • @tobortine
    @tobortine Год назад +1

    Your acerbic wit is not wasted on us John _"...so, as quickly as they could, over the course of the next seven years..."_ 😁

  • @alexpurkis1171
    @alexpurkis1171 Год назад +5

    a village near me has a 'temporary' bridge that was installed in 1968, 56 years ago.

  • @sheilamorrison1954
    @sheilamorrison1954 Год назад +39

    Just an FYI, the Roding is said "Road-ing". There is also an area north of here known as the Rodings containing loads of smaller villages like High Roding, Aythorpe Roding, Leaden Roding and White Roding. All a nod to the little tiny river in the area :)
    Edit - Read the thread, I did a project on this area way back when!

    • @flickthenick
      @flickthenick Год назад +5

      Are you 'fishing' for compliments - small pun there...

    • @aldo5428
      @aldo5428 Год назад +1

      ⁠@@flickthenicksmall but beautifully formed…

    • @iancharlton678
      @iancharlton678 Год назад +3

      You are quite correct……. or not 🎉
      It is largely known as “Road-ing” as you state……… However, in Old Essex parlance the villages, of which there are many, are the Roothings……. even stated on one or two road signs……. 🇬🇧🙂

    • @sheilamorrison1954
      @sheilamorrison1954 Год назад +6

      @@iancharlton678I'm entirely correct as I'm talking about the current time, not 1500 years ago :)
      If we are trying to be a cleaver clogs about it, they were recorded as many things over time. Founded by Hroda (The d is actually said 'th'", they would have been Row-th-ings, or "Ruh-things, think scandi muted uh).
      By the Domesday book they had already become "Roinges, Rodinges". But then, by 1300 odd they had morphed further into some wacky versions like Roothing, Rodynge and my personal favourite, Roodinge!
      Roothing is actually a relatively late, single entry onto their historical name bastardisation.
      And I never thought the project I did at School (Bishops Stortford, near Aythorpe/High Roding), would be of interest but here we are!

    • @iancharlton678
      @iancharlton678 Год назад +2

      @@sheilamorrison1954 calm yourself down. Not a cleaver clogs nor a clever clogs. Merely pointing out what the Old boy Essex Farming folk use and what’s written on the road signs…… and yes, farming have I done, ears open they were, age have I gained.
      It was a polite, bordering on friendly comment.
      I try to avoid keyboard jousting.
      Working in the Ro(a)dings for a few decades, I use Ro(a)ding……… 🙂

  • @johnb8746
    @johnb8746 Год назад +3

    Most good video as always. When the boss says "can you look after project x. Will only be temporary until we get a new staff member" lol

  • @mylesfrost335
    @mylesfrost335 Год назад +4

    Yep an idiom i live by at work is
    "There is nothing more permanent than a temporary solution"

  • @roderickmain9697
    @roderickmain9697 Год назад +3

    Love the running fridge gag. Which is more than you can say for the traffic along that route.

  • @D_4_N_
    @D_4_N_ Год назад +2

    "the year is now 2008- ah, fuck" that was brilliant

  • @dg2908
    @dg2908 Год назад +2

    in the 1990s you'd have had to visit the A494 at Drws-y-Nant where temporary traffic lights installed whilst one side of the road crumbled into the river lasted twenty years

  • @franktuckwell196
    @franktuckwell196 Год назад +1

    There is a temporary fly over railway bridge built by the army in 1953, at Lewisham to take trains from lewisham up and over to the up main fast lines to london bridge, waterloo east and charing cross and to cannon street. Still in use today, 70 years later.

  • @Jario5615
    @Jario5615 Год назад +39

    Another "temporary" solution by Essex County Council was the Army and Navy flyover in Chelmsford, as a temporary solution to congestion that was there for around 30 years. It was only taken down the other year as it was deemed to dangerous for road users, and causing accidents since it was a one way road whose direction changed throughout the day. A consultation is currently ongoing to solve the traffic issue, and the leading solution is to convert the Army and Navy into a hamburger roundabout.

    • @kempshott
      @kempshott Год назад +12

      Also Romford, Essex - the temporary Gallows Corner flyover (A12 / A127) has been there for some 50 years.

    • @TheRip72
      @TheRip72 Год назад +4

      I always found the Army & Navy flyover a bit bizarre. The roundabout allowed the A12 & A130 to cross each other. The A12 was by far the busier of the 2, so the flyover helped out the A130. I guess it made more sense several years later when the A12 bypass was built.

    • @alanlittle4589
      @alanlittle4589 Год назад +4

      ​@@kempshottTBF that'd be Havering, outside of ECC jurisdiction.

    • @shizukaakatatsu22
      @shizukaakatatsu22 Год назад +2

      Man... Essex sure has its own definition for temporary. I mean... 50 years? Even romans with their definition of "durable construction" ending up lasting millennia wouldn't dare call that temporary...

    • @hujiproductions8457
      @hujiproductions8457 Год назад +3

      Sadly, ECC are clueless when it comes to road and traffic flow.

  • @truckerjoe5258
    @truckerjoe5258 Год назад +10

    The amount of times I've been over that bridge in the truck and thought to myself. Sure there must be a weight limit in it as I feel like it would give way any time soon.

    • @jovetj
      @jovetj Год назад

      Could always divert over the old bridge just to be safe.

  • @saintuk70
    @saintuk70 Год назад +16

    The crazy issue with councils is that, for the majority of their budgets, they can't carry monies over each financial year - so if they can't or don't have the money within one financial year, then it won't happen. It's also why, in q4, you get crazy spending on things after Christmas as budget money has to be spent or be lost.

    • @A_Haunted_Pancake
      @A_Haunted_Pancake Год назад +3

      I'm gonna put in a wild guess here, but I assume "lost" doesn't
      mean it gets returned to the taxpayer

    • @saintuk70
      @saintuk70 Год назад +2

      @@A_Haunted_Pancake No, it'll get used elsewhere - but certain underspends won't rollover within services.

    • @jonathanbuzzard1376
      @jonathanbuzzard1376 Год назад +4

      That sort of thing happens in private firms too. If you don't for some reason spend your budget one year in your department then next year your budget will be reduced, so you make sure to spend your whole budget every year. I blame the bean counters.

    • @tomsmith5584
      @tomsmith5584 Год назад +1

      ​@@A_Haunted_Pancake It means that not only does it revert back to the central government, then your next budget gets cut because you didn't spend all of your money last time. The same thing happens in the private sector too, it is just that no one is looking too close.

    • @Summers-lad
      @Summers-lad 10 месяцев назад

      Councils these days have so much less money than they used to that any surplus in the budget is a very rare thing. It's more likely that officials will be told to defer spending until the new financial year. With capital budgets though (e.g. for new bridges) there's more flexibility to carry over between years, because by their nature, building takes time and is harder to constrain within years. (I mean after they've been started!)

  • @binarydinosaurs
    @binarydinosaurs Год назад

    Second I saw the thumbnail I knew this was going to be entertaining. That bridge is even more fun when half of it is shut for works, so you've got the entirety of the A128 on one side of the road. What larks. Garden centre just south of it is a handy place for a post queue pee.

  • @sputumtube
    @sputumtube Год назад

    The little off the cuff remarks have me in stitches (e.g. "as quickly as they could over the course of seven years")...

  • @jacquesvandenberg1873
    @jacquesvandenberg1873 Год назад +8

    Nothing is as permanent as temporary 😂. Another awesome vid, thanks Jon!

  • @dsj672
    @dsj672 Год назад +10

    Very interesting, as are all your videos. I've often driven vintage buses over the "temporary" bridges on route 339 and they do make you concentrate!

  • @jonjohnson2844
    @jonjohnson2844 Год назад +4

    Great little find, there's a lot of old former railway infrastructure on cycling routes close to me - it's amazing how many bridges and viaducts there are which were definitely built to last but probably saw fewer years of service than this 'temporary' structure has.

    • @simontay4851
      @simontay4851 Год назад +1

      They will last forever with little maintenance. Stone bridges last forever.

    • @Summers-lad
      @Summers-lad 10 месяцев назад

      @@simontay4851 Like this one. www.sabre-roads.org.uk/wiki/index.php?title=File:Old_Invergarry_Bridge_-_close_aerial_from_W.jpg (I agree - most of them do last well though.)

  • @rochellehewston9367
    @rochellehewston9367 Год назад +11

    Great story. It’s a bit like the Digbeth flyover in Birmingham sometimes referred to as the camp hill flyover. Constructed in 30hrs one weekend in 1961, it too was to be temporary
    28 years later, the same company that constructed it got to tear it down. So like yours John, temporary is really any length of time you care to say.

  • @JimmyJinIA
    @JimmyJinIA Год назад +2

    I just love Jon's wit. I live in the US, not sure when or if I'll ever get to the UK, but if I do I'll be watching every bridge and overpass to see if I recall seeing them in Jon's videos. Great stuff! HIGHLY ENTERTAINING!

  • @lodkathree
    @lodkathree Год назад +1

    For a touch of international flavour, the Fremantle Traffic Bridge in Western Australia was completed in 1939. It is a four lane 219m long wooden structure, and is finally now scheduled for replacement in 2026.

  • @Dream0Asylum
    @Dream0Asylum Год назад +6

    Seeing a permanent temporary solution and Essex in the same breath was the least surprising bit. One day, in the not too distant future, Essex will be the only burg 100% substantiated by temporary structures.

  • @davidbromiley8748
    @davidbromiley8748 Год назад +1

    There are flyovers on the A13 and A127 roads in Essex that were also similarly designed to be temporary but are still there decades later; they were made in three sections so have humps you bump over either side of the flat middle section

  • @smorris12
    @smorris12 Год назад +5

    You'd think Essex council could have nailed all those extensions together and used them as the bridge...

  • @peterthebricky
    @peterthebricky Год назад +6

    Walton on Thames had a temporary bridge for a longer starting in 1953 with another added in 1999 until both were replaced in 2013

    • @ms73sp
      @ms73sp Год назад

      Great comment. Two temporary bridges before finally the permanent one done.

  • @template16
    @template16 Год назад +3

    Temporary Bridge reminds me of the temporary flyover at Gallows Corner, A12/A127. Another Essex thing.

  • @Pshady
    @Pshady Год назад +11

    If a new bridge is built in the very new future, it should be called the Auto Shenanigans bridge.

    • @markwright3161
      @markwright3161 9 месяцев назад

      And followed by "(placeholder name)" to guarantee it outlasts the bridge :)

  • @williamfence566
    @williamfence566 Год назад +4

    Thank goodness for austerity. If the bridge had been built this episode wouldn't exist.

  • @Shaman_Ray
    @Shaman_Ray Год назад +6

    In Carmarthen town there was a "temporary" Bailey Bridge put in place, it was there close to 30 years ish before it was taken down. Not motorway related but I thought you'd appreciate the activity.

  • @Phuc_Yhou
    @Phuc_Yhou Год назад +7

    When you look at the A120 fiasco and the Raleigh Weir underpass that took longer to complete than the Channel Tunnel it's no surprise they won't attempt a bridge! 😂

  • @charlesmcculloch6299
    @charlesmcculloch6299 Год назад

    Looking forward to Auto Shenanigans covering all 3000 bridges in the UK

  • @paulwalker993RSR
    @paulwalker993RSR Месяц назад

    Thanks for this video; I used to frequently cross this bridge and wondered why the road had been diverted onto a new bridge and the old one left standing. What you didn't mention was the speed limit decrease that has been imposed because of the chicane and lane narrowing that the temporary bridge created. I still occasionally go this route as my parents live in the area still. I am long over being irritated by the road layout and am completely unsurprised by your explanation of supposed lack of funds to replace essential infrastructure properly!. Its funny though that during the time this temporary bridge has been in existence, enough money has been found to re lay both Ongar High Street and Brentwood High Street [both towns at opposing ends of this stretch of the A128] and large sections of pavements with expensive natural cobbles and natural stone, replacing what were perfectly serviceable surfaces with Expensive ones that have now failed and are sunken in many area's!!! Again Thanks for this and also your other video's Highlighting the incompetence and bad management of our authorities.

  • @richardpicking4459
    @richardpicking4459 Год назад +5

    I live about half a mile from said temporary bridge and each time I cross it I do one of two things. 1 - laugh about how long its been there, or 2 - use the additional twists in the road as a bit of a chicane (other traffic allowing of course).

  • @tobyjackman3212
    @tobyjackman3212 Год назад

    This is the best video I've ever seen about anything

  • @jonathonbrett-qn1ic
    @jonathonbrett-qn1ic Год назад +1

    Brilliant episode

  • @laurencemann9394
    @laurencemann9394 Год назад

    "...so as quickly as they could, over the course of seven years..." Brilliant.

  • @georgepitchley3946
    @georgepitchley3946 Год назад +1

    You need to have a look at Gallows Corner Flyover, that’s a one up one down flyover over a large roundabout at the junction of the A12 and A127, it was built in 1970, but is “temporary” it’s been shut numerous times for repairs and deck replacement.

  • @david_harvey
    @david_harvey Год назад +1

    At last that bridge is on here! I hope Jon was doing a silly place name video when he was in Essex!

  • @robshufflebotham2133
    @robshufflebotham2133 Год назад +1

    Walton on Trent. A temporary bailey bridge was built that was so temporary it wore out and they had to replace it. With another temporary bridge. A housing developer is supposed to be paying for a proper bridge but of course they've been allowed to get out of it so the madness continues

  • @vickielawless
    @vickielawless Год назад +8

    Has it really been that long? I know that "temporary" bridge pretty well. For a true display of Essex County Council urgency, try the temporary traffic lights on the bridge over the A12 south of Witham. They have been there at least 5 years..

    • @skinnylew
      @skinnylew Год назад +1

      I believe that recently won the award for the longest running set of temporary roadworks or similar 🤣

    • @mrmando69
      @mrmando69 Год назад +1

      I just said the other day to my misses 'wtf is going on with these fuckin lights , they've been here for bloody years' lol

  • @MG-cp8xk
    @MG-cp8xk Год назад +2

    Due to cut backs the old fridge has been sent to the scrap yard to be recycled.

  • @alexmatthews3484
    @alexmatthews3484 Год назад +2

    I used to commute across it, but I swear it went into use after 98

  • @Daz_Stap
    @Daz_Stap Год назад +1

    You're in my (sort of) neighbourhood Jon! Ive often wondered about this ropey bridge.

  • @geordiedonutmonster
    @geordiedonutmonster Год назад

    Thanks Jon, that was wicked, sweet awesome.

  • @martinlebl631
    @martinlebl631 Год назад

    Prague had a temporary tramway/trolley bridge serving several trolley lines from 1981 to 2013, even though the original intent was just a few years while other things were constructed, but it stayed in service due to convenience, and only got replaced by permanent bridge constructed between 2010 and 2013. Ste steel box sections were used as a temporary road bridge elsewhere, and were put into storage for possible future use as their condition was apparently surprisingly good. So in infrastructure terms "temporary" is a bit longer than in real life.

  • @Broxbhoy1
    @Broxbhoy1 Год назад

    Don't know if anybody has commented in any videos yet on your studio 😂 fpmsl at those crayons, superb man. Absolute deadpan brilliance from you mate, you should be on telly.

  • @philread386
    @philread386 Год назад

    Been over the new bridge many times but didn't realise it was that old ! How time flies.

  •  Год назад +3

    Gallows Corner flyover was constructed as a temporary structure in...1970. It now carries a 20mph speed limit.

    • @Anaerin
      @Anaerin Год назад +1

      And it's just down the A12/A128 from this traversty.

  • @typhoon2827
    @typhoon2827 Год назад

    That 93 degree shelf bracket elbow really grates... 😂

  • @scottishcarenthusiastsandtrain
    @scottishcarenthusiastsandtrain 5 месяцев назад

    Another fantastic episode Jon.

  • @theunknownstuntman4010
    @theunknownstuntman4010 Год назад

    Bridge was "buggered beyond repair", glad to see the use of correct technical terms lol

  • @hopkinsmiler
    @hopkinsmiler Год назад

    Similar story to the temporary buildings at my old school. They were 30 years old and due to come down in the late 90s. Roll forward to 2024 and they are still there.

  • @donofthedonmtb
    @donofthedonmtb Год назад

    The town I grew up in had a temporary Bailey bridge installed after a flood in 1980. It was taken out in 2015.

  • @tomhami
    @tomhami Год назад +1

    Yup, I live just up the road. They "refurbished" it last year with new surface on the metal deck and repaint following sustancial repairs on the railings.

  • @UKVampy
    @UKVampy Год назад +2

    Sounds about right.

  • @adlam97531
    @adlam97531 Год назад

    Same with Hoe Mill Bridge, Woodham Walter, in Essex. The bridge needs replacing but they have kept it in place with a 2 metre width restriction and a 3 ton limit. The width restrictions are so tight, I have seen many a large car come unstuck.

  • @MrFlazz99
    @MrFlazz99 Год назад

    Councils love the word 'temporary'. In my locality there is a stretch of road that's been signposted 'temporary road surface' (big red sign) for about the same length of time - they bunged down some rough tarmac and left it, knowing that weather and traffic density would take their toll, presumably with the intention of revisiting it at a later date.

  • @charlesstorey8425
    @charlesstorey8425 Год назад

    I hope your excellent channel is that "temporary"! Keep up the great and amusing work.

  • @AlFred-cc6wm
    @AlFred-cc6wm Год назад

    I remember using the original bridge, damn that makes me feel old ....

  • @Jim-Scott
    @Jim-Scott Год назад

    I remember that bridge going in. I was doing a lot of baling around that area back then, and the traffic was chaos for ages.

  • @belgianfsgamer
    @belgianfsgamer Год назад

    Here in Antwerp we also had a “temporary” bridge. They finally took it down after about 30 years

  • @dave0smeg
    @dave0smeg Год назад

    Around here there is a road repair patch with "TEMP" spray painted on it. It's been there so long that the coulcil have repainted the road markings over it.

  • @jamesweatherley9215
    @jamesweatherley9215 Год назад

    Reminds me of a bridge on the South Deeside Road in Aberdeenshire (Tilbouries Burn?). A post war concrete bridge was found to be defective in the eighties, so all traffic including HGVs was re-routed via the original centuries old stone bridge that was still holding up just fine.

  • @dandm123
    @dandm123 Год назад

    At University I lived in a temporary college building that had been built 32 years earlier to last for 5 years. Another 27 years later and it's coming to its 60th anniversary.

  • @donalddodson7365
    @donalddodson7365 Год назад

    In 1968 I lived in "temporary" US Army barracks built in 1938 at Fort Ord, California, USA. Many were still in use when the base was closed in the 1990's.

  • @neilbain8736
    @neilbain8736 Год назад

    There was a bailey bridge at Irvine on the A71 we used to drive over a lot. It was also temporary but was always there every time we went to Irvine for the annual boat jumble and was quite fun driving across. It was Khaki green if I remember. I've not been there for some time though and just now looked it up. It's been sneakily replaced, apparently after 38 years. The new bridge is now called the Foulertoun Bridge but the locals still call it the Bailey Bridge out of habit.

  • @john07973
    @john07973 Год назад

    👍 Good stuff.....I live in the Royal Borough near B3028 Bray in Berks theres been a temporary Bailey Bridge there for over 20 years

  • @Railfan608
    @Railfan608 Год назад

    In New Zealand, we had a section of temporary incline railway that was in use for 77 years until a tunnel was built to replace it. Granted, tunnel construction was hampered by the Long Depression, the minor disagreement of 1914 - 1918, the Great Depression, and the minor disagreement of 1939 - 1945.

  • @aaronlee2240
    @aaronlee2240 Год назад

    I drive over that bridge quite alot, always wondered why it was so strange, should have guessed it was because the council were busy pocketing the cash to improve it, thanks! 👍🏻

  • @crazyleyland5106
    @crazyleyland5106 10 месяцев назад

    On the south side of Witham, a slip road leading onto the A12 has a supposedly temporary traffic light, where the defective bridge or parapet means that half the road is closed. It's been there for over 4 years.

  • @daandanx
    @daandanx Год назад

    A very fun, short, but sweet video!

  • @lenniet
    @lenniet Год назад

    Take a look at the Chiswick flyover at the Hogarth roundabout, in west London. Apparently when it was constructed in 1969 it was meant to be up for only six months.... it still stands to this day!

  • @isaacbobjork7053
    @isaacbobjork7053 Год назад

    Here where I live in Sweden we had until last year a railway platform which was temporary, opened in 1974.

  • @Daisysdomain
    @Daisysdomain Год назад

    I have quite often passed over that bridge having idea that it was a temporary bridge, but I did always wonder why the road was laid out like that.
    Another great and informative video Jon.

  • @nigel9843
    @nigel9843 Год назад

    There is also the flyover at Gallows Corner which was built in the 50s as a temporary structure, still there today.

  • @minibus9
    @minibus9 Год назад

    awesome video, looking forward to the next one

  • @LeePorte
    @LeePorte Год назад

    The Bristol temporary flyover springs to mind

  • @benturner2693
    @benturner2693 Год назад

    I'm from nearby Billericay, I was born in 1998. I'm happy to know this temporary bridge is the same age as me. I'll check and update you all on my 30th birthday if there's any change, and every 5 years subsequently...

  • @mistywolf312
    @mistywolf312 Год назад

    ECC are good at temporary structures that stay in place, they built a flyover on the army and navy roundabout to temporarily help trafffic while a bypass was being built in 1976, they were forced to knock it down reluctantly last year due to structural issues

  • @philtucker1224
    @philtucker1224 Год назад

    Nice one John, keep well mate 👍

  • @karlosh9286
    @karlosh9286 Год назад

    You should have a look at Gallows Corner, Romford, Essex where the A12 , A127 meet.
    I don't go that way now , but the flyover was meant to be temporary , and was still there a few years ago !

  • @garethdavies7450
    @garethdavies7450 Год назад

    A temporary Bailey Bridge was installed in 1980 at Glanwerney, Crickhowell..still in use..and thought that sort of thing only happened in Wales

  • @alecoldroyd6213
    @alecoldroyd6213 Год назад

    I spent many happy tacho breaks in that stub of road, or just up the way near the fantastically well signposted Secret Nuclear Bunker! Used to be a nice Geocache in one of the old bridge rails too!

  • @Spudtrucker84
    @Spudtrucker84 Год назад

    I always remember when I was young we went over the old bridge before they built the so called temporary one, the council won’t do nothing till it falls into the river

  • @KenFullman
    @KenFullman 10 месяцев назад

    When I was a kid, back in the 1960s, the council put up a "temporary" flyover at Gallows Corner. This was supposed to allow traffic travelling along the A12 to avoid the roundabout. Unfortunately someone didn't read the signs properly so it ended up connecting the London end of the A12 to the A127. So anyone wanting to approach this junction on the A12 and wishing to stay on the A12 would need to use the roundabout. No big deal as it was only a temporary bridge so they could rectify this mistake when they build the permanent one. Trouble is, that temporary bridge is still there to this day.
    The other interesting thing about this mistake was that the flyover has some terrible quirks. At the top of the ramp it suddenly changes gradient onto the flat. At this point it's like reaching the summit of a blind hill. It's exactly at this location (as you loose your forward visibility and weight is removed from the front wheels, thereby making steering less responsive) that they choose to put a sharp angle into the direction the road takes. The barriers haven't always been able to stop those that are caught out by this surprise. So many vehicles have plummeted onto the roundabout from above.