A1(M) Birtley By-pass

A1(M) Birtley By-pass

HER Number
15241
District
Gateshead
Site Name
A1(M) Birtley By-pass
Place
Birtley
Map Sheet
NZ36SW
Class
Transport
Site Type: Broad
Road Transport Site
Site Type: Specific
Road
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Late 20th Century 1967 to 2000
Form of Evidence
Structure
Description
A 2.5 mile section of dual three-lane carriageway costing £2.3 million. Constructed between July 1968 and April 1970 by Robert McGregor & Sons Ltd. On completion this was the first dual three-lane motorway north of the M1. The scheme was built on the same alignment as the existing Trunk Road A1 dual carriageway by-pass, built in the 1930s. The contract included five bridges, one over a railway. The bridges had spread footings. Four had pre-cast pre-stressed beams. One bridge had steel I beams and was the longest single-span bridge to have been designed by the NERCU (North East Road Construction Unit) Durham Sub-Unit. The span was 150 feet and had a skew of 33 degrees. Each of the 8 beams weighed 30 tons. This bridge carried the north carriageway over the southbound carriageway of the A1(M), being the future link road to the Tyne Tunnel. Two mine shafts were found (12 were shown on the contract drawings, all disused for nearly 100 years). The in-filled shafts were capped by concrete slabs 2 feet thick.
Easting
431020
Northing
561850
Grid Reference
NZ431020561850
Sources
F.A. Sims, 2009, The Motorway Achievement - Building the Network in the North East of England, pp 62-63