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bridge section on barge travelling on water out of a port

Historic moment as final bridge parts arrive in city

EARLY risers in Sunderland witnessed a historic moment on Saturday morning [31st Aug], as the final sections of the New Wear Footbridge arrived in the city.

Footbridge section on barge sailing from a port

Marking another major milestone in the development of the city’s newest landmark, the two steel sections, with lengths of 63 and 105 metres respectively, set sail from Ghent on Wednesday 28 August and arrived at Port of Sunderland on Saturday.

The centrepiece of the Riverside Sunderland development, one of the UK’s largest urban regeneration projects, the bridge is earmarked for a Summer 2025 opening, and will provide a major boost to local businesses, improving access to the Sheepfolds Stables, the Stadium of Light, Housing & Innovation Construction Skills Academy (HICSA), and the new residential neighbourhood being created to the north of the river. 

Once weather permits, the two parts will be shipped upriver beyond the historic Wearmouth Bridge, to the site of the New Wear Footbridge where they will then be carefully lifted into place by the VolkerStevin team.

“This is another pivotal moment and major milestone in the development of the city’s newest landmark, and we are extremely proud to be a part of this monumental project. The team are now preparing the site ready to lift the two sections into place, it will be another exciting moment to see and get these two final sections of the bridge into place.”

Mike Rimmer Senior project manager at VolkerStevin

Ten metres wide and spanning 250 metres, at a height of 30m above the river, the New Wear footbridge is one of several high-profile developments currently under construction at Riverside Sunderland. 

Once the final two parts of the bridge have been lifted into place, the VolkerStevin team will then begin welding the pieces together, installing the deck and the railings, and then adding the final touches to prepare it for opening. 

Cllr Kevin Johnston, portfolio holder for housing, regeneration and business at Sunderland City Council, said: “There has been a real buzz around the city over the arrival and installation of the first two sections of the New Wear Footbridge and I’m sure that momentum will only continue to build now that the final sections have arrived.

“Seeing the barge arrive with the first sections and then sail upriver beyond the Wearmouth bridge was a spectacle in itself, never mind the incredible feat of engineering to lift and assemble the parts thereafter, so we are looking forward to seeing a repeat, as the final sections are carefully lifted into place.

“It is also incredibly symbolic in the sense that it is bridging Sunderland’s past and future. A whole host of developments are either underway or set to be developed across both sides of the River Wear as part of the Riverside Sunderland masterplan and this will play a key role in linking all of those projects.

“New offices, homes, parks, hospitals, leisure venues, educational institutes and sporting arenas are all set to be completed over the coming years and is the New Wear Footbridge is central to all of that. It’s arguably one of the most exciting periods in the city’s rich history.”

Riverside Sunderland is recognised as one of the UK’s most ambitious regeneration projects, with more than £500m of development projects live on site right now.  The scheme seeks to double the number of people living within Sunderland city centre while providing workspace for 8,000 – 10,000 quality jobs.