Ney & Partners Bxl NV

Tintagel Castle Footbridge

Tintagel Castle Footbridge
© Hufton & Crow

TINTAGEL CASTLE FOOTBRIDGE

Ney & Partners, William Matthews Associates

LOCAL STRUCTURAL ENGINEER
HRW Engineers

PHOTOGRAPHS
Hufton & Crow, David Levene, Jim Holden

LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS
Nicholas Pearson Associates

QUANTITY SURVEYOR
Faithful & Gould

YEAR
2019

PLANNING CONSULTANT
CSJ Planning

WIND TUNNEL TESTING & VIBRATION ANALYSIS
RWDI

STRUCTURAL ENGINEERS
Ney & Partners, Ney & Partners

COST CONSULTANT
Faithful & Gould

GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERS
Ramboll, Ramboll

LOCATION
United Kingdom

CATEGORIES
Pedestrian Bridge

Text description provided by architect.

Spanning a 190-foot gorge and with a gasp-inducing gap in the middle, the bridge follows the line of the original route – a narrow strip of land, long lost to erosion – between the 13th-century gatehouse on the mainland and the courtyard on the jagged headland or island jutting into the sea.

Tintagel Castle Footbridge
© Hufton & Crow
Tintagel Castle Footbridge
© Hufton & Crow

So significant was this historic crossing that it gave rise to the place’s name, the Cornish Din Tagell meaning “the Fortress of the Narrow Entrance”.

The medieval scholar Geoffrey of Monmouth wrote that this land-bridge was so narrow that “three armed men would be able to defend [it], even if you had the whole kingdom of Britain at your side”.

Tintagel Castle Footbridge
© Hufton & Crow

Legend has it that the King of Britain, Uther Pendragon – transformed by the wizard Merlin into the likeness of the Duke of Cornwall – stole across this passage way into the castle where he spent the night with the Duke’s wife, Ygerna, who later gave birth to the future King Arthur.

So impressed was Richard, Earl of Cornwall by the Arthurian myth that in the 1230s and 1240s he built a castle at Tintagel, with the land-bridge an integral part of its design.

Tintagel Castle Footbridge
Courtesy of English Heritage Trust

That crossing vanished in the 15th or 16th century but now English Heritage has restored it, replacing the original rock, earth and grass with a footbridge of steel, local Cornish slate, and oak.

Built in Plymouth and designed by Ney & Partner engineers and William Matthews Associates Architectural Practice, the bridge consists of two independent cantilevers of approximately 30 metres length each that reach out from either side to – almost – touch in the middle.

Tintagel Castle Footbridge
Courtesy of English Heritage Trust

At the centre of the bridge, a narrow gap (40mm) has been designed to represent the transition between the mainland and the island, the present and the past, history and legend.

The elegant bridge complements the outstanding landscape and unlocks for the visitor the history of the site.

Tintagel Castle Footbridge
© Hufton & Crow

Tintagel Castle welcomes almost 250,000 visitors each year and the new footbridge will help to reduce congestion – especially at peak periods – and provide a step-free route onto the island, helping more people to enjoy a visit to the castle.

The bridge at Tintagel Castle is part of a larger £5m programme of works by English Heritage which includes improving the footpaths around the site, helping to limit the impact of visitors on the castle’s unique archaeology, and ecology.

Tintagel Castle Footbridge
© Hufton & Crow


Tintagel Castle Footbridge
Sections
Tintagel Castle Footbridge
Section


Tintagel Castle Footbridge
Railing detail
Tintagel Castle Footbridge
Abutment detail


Tintagel Castle Footbridge
Plan and elevation

Ney & Partners Bxl NV
T +32 2 6432180
Ney & Partners Bxl NV
Chau. de la Hulpe 181, 1170 Watermael-Boitsfort, Belgium