Le pont levant de Leamington est un pont levant qui traverse le Canal de l'Union près de son terminus au bassin de Lochrin, à Édimbourg en Écosse.

1. Histoire

Le pont a été installé vers 1906, là où Fountainbridge traversait le canal, remplaçant un ancien pont construit en 1869 . Lorsque le canal a été raccourci en 1922 pour faire du bassin de Lochrin le terminus, il a été déplacé sur son site actuel pour remplacer un pont-levis en bois. Il a cessé d'être utilisé dans les années 1960, mais dans le cadre du projet du Millennium Link visant à restaurer le canal Union, il devait être restauré afin de permettre le passage des bateaux. Un rapport publié en 2000 avait suggéré de le laisser ouvert en permanence, mais il a été décidé de le remettre en plein état de fonctionner. La restauration a consisté à retirer le tablier et la partie supérieure du pont pour accéder aux rouages internes. Il a été ouvert pour la première fois le 16 mai 2002, suivi d’une cérémonie d’inauguration le 24 mai.

1. Conception

Le pont traverse Gilmore Park et Leamington Road, mais n'est pas ouvert aux voitures. Une passerelle permanente en treillis permet aux piétons de traverser lorsque le tablier est surélevé. Il est formé d'acier riveté, avec des colonnes plus importantes du côté sud où sont logés les moteurs et les contrepoids .

Le pont peut être ouvert par les utilisateurs du canal après une formation appropriée dispensée par les canaux écossais .

1. Références


1. Liens externes

Portail de l’Écosse Portail des ponts

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Leamington Lift Bridge

The Leamington Lift Bridge is a lift bridge that crosses the Union Canal near its terminus at Lochrin Basin in Edinburgh.
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St Kentigern's Church, Edinburgh (Union Canal)

St Kentigern's Church is a former Episcopalian church which is now disused in Edinburgh, Scotland. The congregation began in 1859 on Earl Grey Street as a mission station of St John's Episcopal Church on Princes Street. The church is located on the Union Canal in Viewforth and was built in 1897. The stone Gothic-style building was designed by John More Dick Peddie, a prolific Scottish architect and the designer of the Caledonian Hilton building. The church closed in 1941 after which it was used as a nursery and a garage. In 2005, there was an attempt to demolish the church. In 2015, the church was found to contain a large cannabis haul. In 2020, City of Edinburgh Council received a planning application to convert the church into residential use. As of 2024, it has been converted into housing.
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Boroughmuir High School

Boroughmuir High School is a non-denominational secondary school in the Fountainbridge area of Edinburgh, Scotland.
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Union Canal (Scotland)

The Union Canal, full name the Edinburgh and Glasgow Union Canal, is a canal in Scotland, running from Falkirk to Edinburgh, constructed to bring minerals, especially coal, to the capital. It was opened in 1822 and was initially successful, but the construction of railways, particularly the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway, which opened in 1842, diminished its value as a transport medium. It fell into slow commercial decline and was closed to commercial traffic in 1933. It was officially closed in 1965. The canal is listed as three individual scheduled monuments by Historic Scotland according to the three former counties, Midlothian, West Lothian and Stirlingshire, through which it flows. It has benefited from a general revival of interest in canals and, as a result of the Millennium Link, was reopened in 2001 and reconnected to the Forth and Clyde Canal in 2002 by the Falkirk Wheel. It is now in popular use for leisure purposes.
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Lochrin

Lochrin is a small area in Edinburgh, the capital of Scotland. It is in the south-west corner of the city centre, to the west of Tollcross, and south of Fountainbridge. Lochrin contains a wide mixture of retail shops, leisure facilities, other businesses and tenement housing. Major new office and residential developments have replaced some of the older buildings. When the basins at the eastern end of the Union Canal were filled in and the canal truncated in 1921, Lochrin Basin became the eastern terminus. At that time, the Leamington Lift Bridge was moved from where Fountainbridge crossed the canal to its current location just to the west of the basin. Lochrin Basin is the centrepiece of Edinburgh Quay, a mixed-use development providing office and residential accommodation and licensed premises, which was voted the Best Regeneration project in Scotland at the Scottish Design Awards 2005. It is also the eastern end of the Forth and Clyde Canal Pathway.