Severn crossing
The Severn Bridge is nowadays generally regarded (at least by people in the south of England) as the main crossing point from England into Wales, despite the fact that the two countries share a land border. Prior to 1966, when the first suspension bridge was built across the estuary of the River Severn, road traffic between Wales and the southern counties of England - including London - either had to travel via Gloucester or take a ferry, which ran, roughly along the line of the Severn Bridge, from Aust to Beachley. The Anglo-Welsh poet, Harri Webb, wrote these lines:
- Two lands at last connected
- Across the waters wide,
- And all the tolls collected
- On the English side.
...a joke which was often repeated. The toll is indeed collected on the English side, and only on vehicles travelling from England to Wales. This arrangement eliminates the need for a set of toll booths for each direction of travel.
The Severn Bridge is really two bridges in succession: travelling west a vehicle passes over the main Severn Bridge but then almost immediately over a second, cable-stayed bridge, of very different appearance, crossing the River Wye. Surprisingly, Welsh soil does not begin until after this second bridge has been crossed - both ends of the Severn Bridge itself are in England, one in the Unitary Authority of South Gloucestershire, the other in the Forest of Dean district of Gloucestershire.
Although the bridge made an enormous difference, it was soon a major bottleneck, and the burden of maintenance became unmanageable, so that by the 1990s a second bridge was necessary.
Second Severn Crossing
The Second Severn Crossing, opened on the 5th June 1996, was built by a business consortium, and this time the tolls were collected on the Welsh side (but in the same direction). The second bridge, which is of cable-stayed construction and hence, despite the apparent similarity, is not a suspension bridge, is wider and more resistant to high winds, and, because of its location, enjoys more traffic than the first bridge, which is still in general use. Its Welsh end is in Monmouthshire; its English end, in South Gloucestershire.
External link
- http://www.severnbridge.co.uk - The bridges' operating company. Facts and figures, history etc about the crossings.