Chappel Viaduct
{{Short description|Railway viaduct in Essex, England}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2017}}
{{Use British English|date=April 2017}}
{{Infobox Bridge
|bridge_name = Chappel Viaduct
|image = Chappel Viaduct and Green.jpg
|caption = The viaduct in 2006
|official_name =
|carries = Gainsborough Line
|crosses = River Colne
|location = Essex, England
|maint = Network Rail
|id =
|designer =
|design = Viaduct
|material = Brick
|spans =
|pierswater =
|mainspan =
|length = {{convert|1060|ft|m}}
|height = {{convert|75|ft|m}}
|load =
|clearance =
|below =
|traffic =
|begin = 1847
|complete = {{Start date and age|1849|df=yes}}
|open =
|heritage = Listed structure
|collapsed =
|preceded =
|followed =
|closed =
|toll =
|coordinates = {{coord|51.9209|0.7557|region:GB-ESS|display=inline,title}}
| os_grid_reference = TL896283
|width =
}}
The Chappel Viaduct is a railway viaduct that crosses the River Colne in the Colne Valley in Essex, England. It carries the Gainsborough Line which now is a short branch linking {{rws|Marks Tey}} in Essex to {{rws|Sudbury}} in Suffolk. The line previously, however, extended to Shelford in Cambridgeshire.
It was completed in 1849 by the Eastern Union Railway, which was later absorbed into the Great Eastern Railway. It is the longest bridge in the East Anglia region at {{convert|1060|ft|m}}, and one of the largest brick-built structures in the country. It was listed at Grade II in 1967.
Description
File:Under the arches, Chappel Viaduct (geograph 3984035).jpg
The viaduct consists of 32 {{convert|30|ft|adj=on}} semi-circular spans, with tapered piers; it is {{convert|1060|ft|m}} long and rises to a maximum height of {{convert|75|ft|m}}. The piers consist of two shafts, separated by a {{convert|6|ft|m|0|adj=on}} opening, joined at the top and bottom by arches. Each shaft contains a hollow void up to {{convert|4|ft|m}} by {{convert|3|ft|m|0}}, partially filled with concrete to the level of the bottom arch. The running level of the viaduct has a gradient of 1 in 120.
Construction
The seven million bricks used in the construction of the viaduct were made from clay excavated from the nearby village of Bures. It was built to carry a double-track railway but only a single track was laid. The bridge was built by Peter Bruff between 1847 and 1849 for the Colchester, Stour Valley, Sudbury & Halstead Railway, later part of the Great Eastern Railway.{{Cite journal | last1 = Bruff | first1 = P. | title = Description of the Chapple Viaduct, Upon the Colchester and Stour Valley Extension, of the Eastern Counties Railway | doi = 10.1680/imotp.1850.24162 | journal = Minutes of the Proceedings | volume = 9 | issue = 1850 | pages = 287–292 | year = 1850 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=U3UMAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA287#v=onepage&q&f=false }}
The railway initially planned to build the viaduct with laminated timber but Bruff opted for brick to reduce the cost.{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/england/sevenwonders/east/chappell_mm/index.shtml|title=Chappel Viaduct|date=28 October 2014|publisher=BBC|access-date=21 February 2016}} He debated the cost benefits of brick compared to timber with the Great Western Railway's chief engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel after a lecture at the Institution of Civil Engineers in 1850, Brunel being strongly in favour of using timber. Bruff went on to commission a painting of the viaduct by Frederick Brett Russell, which is now held by Ipswich Museum. Sources differ on the cost of construction; E. A. Labrum gives the cost as £21,000, while Historic England state a figure of £32,000 (both 1849).{{cite book|last=Labrum|first=E.A.|title=Civil Engineering Heritage: Eastern and central England|year=1994|publisher=Thomas Telford Publishing|location=London|isbn=9780727719706|pages=162|chapter=South Suffolk and Essex}}
A foundation stone in pier 21 was laid by the railway company's chairman and deputy chairman at the start of works in September 1847 and newly minted coins were placed inside as a souvenir. The stone and coins disappeared within a few hours of being placed and a bricklayer was later arrested, having tried to pay at a bar with a new half sovereign,{{cite book|last=Biddle|first=Gordon|title=Britain's Historic Railway Buildings: An Oxford Gazetteer of Structures and Sites|edition=First|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford|isbn=9780198662471|year=2003|pages=199}} but was not convicted of the theft due to lack of evidence.
Listing
File:Chappel Viaduct From Highway.jpg
The viaduct was designated a Grade II listed structure on 27 November 1967.{{National Heritage List for England |num=1238766 |desc=The Viaduct|accessdate=21 February 2016}}{{cite book|last=Biddle|first=Gordon|title=Britain's Historic Railway Buildings: A Gazetteer of Structures|year=2011 |edition=Second|publisher=Ian Allan Publishing|location=Hersham, Surrey|isbn=9780711034914|pages=236}} It is reportedly constructed from 7 million bricks. It is amongst the largest brick-built structures in England, after Liverpool's Stanley Dock Warehouse (27 million bricks), Battersea Power Station in London, and Stockport Viaduct and Ouse Valley Viaduct which used approximately 11 million bricks each.
See also
References
{{Reflist|30em}}