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Neidpath Viaduct, occasionally known as the Queen's Bridge, [1] consists of eight stone skew arches and was built to carry the Symington to Peebles branch line of the Caledonian Railway over the River Tweed to the south-west of Neidpath Castle. Now closed to rail traffic the bridge is used as a footpath.
Goyt Viaduct a.k.a. Strines Viaduct: Strines, Stockport: 1865: Stone arch and girder: II: Spans the River Goyt: Great Musgrave Bridge: Great Musgrave, Cumbria: 1862: Infilled with 1500 tons of concrete in July 2021 by National Highways [4] Gree Viaduct: North-East Ayrshire, Scotland: on the former Lanarkshire and Ayrshire Railway. Demolished ...
Neidpath Railway Viaduct (Near Neidpath Castle) 55°38′57″N 3°13′14″W / 55.649211°N 3.220615°W / 55.649211; -3.220615 ( Neidpath Railway Viaduct (Near Neidpath Category A
The section of the old line between Broughton and Biggar (starting beyond the coal yard in Broughton) is used as a footpath. The section from Neidpath Viaduct to Lyne Station is also a public footpath. When the branch line closed in 1954, the Peebles (West) goods yard continued in use, served by the link line from the NBR line.
In 2005, a study by the New Economics Foundation ranked Peebles as the best town in Scotland (second best in the UK, after Hebden Bridge in Yorkshire) for a range of independent shops and 'home town identity'. [20] The local health facility is Hay Lodge Hospital in Neidpath Road. [21]
Neidpath Viaduct; Newbattle Viaduct; North Water Viaduct; T. Tay Bridge; Tay Viaduct; W. Woodroad Viaduct This page was last edited on 2 May 2020, at 12:34 ...
Once trains have crossed the viaduct, northbound trains will pass Wendover in a tunnel, the company said. Follow Beds, Herts and Bucks news on BBC Sounds , Facebook , Instagram and X . HS2 in ...
The viaduct, which is constructed on a gentle curve, was a conventional masonry structure. [2] It consists of 28 arches, 15 of which being over land to the south of the River Tweed and 13 over the river itself; these were set out in two groups separated by a stop pier. [3]