Top facts you should know about Tower Bridge
How old is the Bridge? What colour was it first painted?
Here are your top facts and interesting things to know about London's defining landmark.
How old is the Bridge? What colour was it first painted?
Here are your top facts and interesting things to know about London's defining landmark.
Tower Bridge was opened to the public in 1894. When compared with its neighbour – the Tower of London (built in the 11th century) – it is rather young!
The Bridge may appear to be a stone castle-like structure, but its Neo-Gothic style design was chosen so that it complemented the White Tower, which was one of the stipulations of the original competition.
These style additions were used as an artistic flourish to cover the real structure of Tower Bridge, which is a solid steel frame partially visible through the windows of Tower Bridge.
Over 50 designs were submitted to a competition to win the contract for designing the Bridge.
After the competition was abandoned in 1879, architect Sir Horace Jones teamed up with civil engineer Sir John Wolfe Barry, to adapt his previously rejected design - pictured here with a large arch where the high-level Walkways are now located.
The new design from Jones and Barry was proposed to the Court of Common Council on 28 October 1884 and then to Parliament in November 1884, where it was approved.
Unfortunately, Jones died one year into the Bridge's construction and never got to see it finished.
Building the Bridge took eight years to complete and ran to a cost of over £1 million.
Many different people were involved in the building of the Bridge, from the Divers who helped build into the bed of the River Thames to squads of Riveters who oversaw the elevation of the Towers by inserting over 13 million rivets into the steel.
Drawbridges require ropes or chains to pull up the road, but Tower Bridge’s roads are too heavy to be opened like this.
Instead, it is a bascule bridge, which means the roads (bascules) move like two giant seesaws and pivot to open and close the bridge. The word Bascule derives from the French for 'see-saw' or 'balance'.
Its original colour was 'bright chocolate' brown, rumoured to be Queen Victoria’s favourite colour. You can still see the original paint colour when visiting inside Tower Bridge.
This colour scheme survived until battleship grey was applied as camouflage pre-WW2.
In 1977, it was repainted the red, white and blue colours you can still see today, to celebrate Her Late Majesty The Queen’s Silver Jubilee.
When first built, Tower Bridge was the most sophisticated bascule bridge ever completed. The bascules were operated by hydraulics, using steam to power the enormous pumping engines.
Today, the bascules are still operated by hydraulic power, but are driven by oil and electricity rather than steam.
You can see the original pumping engines, accumulators and boilers on display in the Engine Rooms.
The Bridge is bound by an Act of Parliament to give river traffic priority over road traffic, which can sometimes be frustrating to car drivers stuck in rush hour traffic!
The Tower Bridge Act of 1885 also states that the Bridge is to be opened free of charge for river traffic.
The Walkways that span the two towers were installed with Glass Floors in 2014, so that visitors can look down to the road and river below!
They are very strong and can hold the weight of more than two black taxi cabs, but the question is - when will you walk across them?
London Bridge used to be the sole river crossing in London in Roman times. It has been rebuilt and changed many times since then. The modern concrete and steel structure we know today was opened to traffic in 1973.
Tower Bridge, on the other hand, has never fallen down. It stands today as it was built in 1894. It is known as London's defining landmark - representing London as an iconic structure that is recognised the world-over.
Tower Bridge's Towers are listed within two different London boroughs.
The South side of the Bridge belongs to Southwark, and was listed on 6 December 1949. Its North Tower, in Tower Hamlets, was listed decades later, on 27 September 1973.
There is so much more to discover inside Tower Bridge, from the unique views of the city to the history of London's defining landmark.