Thursday, June 30, 2005

WORK STARTS FOR BRIDGE MOVE

30 June 2005

Work has started on preparing the new seafront site for Swansea's old Slip Bridge. Specialist lifting equipment will be drafted in to lift the bridge into position at its new home on July 10. Groundworks for the project are now underway.

The Slip Bridge originally spanned Oystermouth Road but was taken down following an inspection which highlighted its poor condition. Specialist bridge contractors have been busy carrying out vital steel repairs to the landmark structure and making sure the bridge can withstand the forces of nature for many more years.

Its new site will form part of the popular walking and cycling route along Swansea's seafront.

John Hague, Swansea Council's cabinet member for the environment, said: "This is an exciting project which will give the bridge a new lease of life to remain as a prominent and striking feature of Swansea Bay."

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

BRIDGE MUST BE SCRAPPED

28 June 2005

Driving by the Slip Bridge now that the covers are off, it begs the question of just how much more time and money is going to be wasted by putting it in another location. It will be completely out of character to place it anywhere along the cycle path.

The Opinion column (Post, June 21) is so completely right. The council is a laughing stock and as such should make the firm decision to scrap the bridge sooner rather than later.

Even the diehards for retaining the bridge must see by now the futility of the project. Can they really see it placed in a different position?

Roy Edmonds
Silver Close
West Cross
Swansea

Monday, June 27, 2005

SLIP BRIDGE GETS READY FOR NEW SEAFRONT HOME

LEON WATSON - 27 June 2005

Swansea's Slip Bridge will be transferred to its new home next month after the completion of work to give it a new lease of life. Specialist lifting equipment will be drafted in to lift the bridge into position at its new home along the seafront.

The work will take place on Sunday July 10.The Slip Bridge originally spanned Oystermouth Road but was taken down following an inspection which highlighted its poor condition.

It would have needed hundreds of thousands of pounds spending on it.Specialist bridge contractors have been busy carrying out vital steel repairs to the landmark structure and making sure the bridge can withstand the forces of nature for many more years to come.

Planning permission was recently approved by Swansea Council to allow the bridge to be transferred to its new home, where it will form part of the popular walking and cycle route along Swansea's seafront.

John Hague, Swansea Council's cabinet member for the environment said: "This is an exciting project which will give the bridge a new lease of life and remain as a prominent and striking feature of Swansea Bay."

People on the foreshore path yesterday gave the idea cautious welcome.

Cyclist Kevin Davies, aged 43, of The Grove in the city's Uplands added: "I think it will become quite a focal point in time. But it will also stand out until people get used to it."

Walker Peter Vaughan, aged 56, of Blackpill said: "I still think it is a shame it wasn't kept where it was. It would have served a more useful purpose there."

Officials say it will be necessary to close a section of Oystermouth Road to carry out the operation.

Local police will manage a diversionary route along Bryn Road and Gorse Lane.

A council spokesman added: "The closure will take place from midnight on Saturday, July 9. It is hoped the road will open again by midday on Sunday July 10."

Friday, June 24, 2005

NO CHANCE FOR COUNCIL

24 June 2005

A recent letter by a reader stated that we should give the new council administration a chance. Why? In their first year in office, they have ignored consultation that wanted to keep the Slip Bridge. They are closing schools left, right and centre and putting up the price of car parking.

If the next three years are going to be the same, I do not think we can afford to give them a chance.

When I contacted my local council office to get litter picked up on nearby land I was told there was no money available and that it was all going to the leisure centre.

I voted Independent but I have got Tories and Liberals running the council. Never again.

M Furnler
Llangyfelach Road
Treboeth
Swansea

Tuesday, June 21, 2005

SCRAP SLIP BRIDGE

Evening Post Editorial - 21 June 2005

With further confusion over its final resting place, the Swansea Slip Bridge farce must be brought to a close. Swansea Council is making itself a laughing stock with its handling of this rusting relic of a bygone age.

Enough is enough, the council must bite the bullet and decide that the future of the Slip Bridge is that it has no future.

Scrap it - now!

Monday, June 20, 2005

BUNGLING COUNCIL IN NEW SITE SLIP-UP

LEON WATSON - 20 June 2005

Swansea's historic Slip Bridge has suffered another slip-up after bungling council officers discovered that its proposed final resting place was too near the city's war memorial. The decaying structure was set to move from the Recreation Ground in Mumbles Road, where it was dumped to undergo repairs, to the promenade opposite.

But after the controversial relocation was rubber-stamped by councillors in April, it became clear there was a big bridge-shaped problem.

If the move went ahead as planned, the ageing footbridge, which stands covered in plastic sheeting, would disrupt one of Swansea's flagship summer sporting events.

Council officers realised the new location would cause a potential conflict at the finishing line of the annual Swansea Bay 10k Road Race and Fun Run.

It was also realised that this location would seriously overshadow the Cenotaph, South African War memorial and Swansea Jack memorial.

Now planners have been forced to lodge another planning application with Swansea Council to approve a new home for the bridge. If the proposals are agreed, it will now stand a little further along the promenade - 87 metres to be exact - to allow the memorials to be accessed.

Objections to the plan, due to looked at on Tuesday, have already been received saying the bridge is of no further use and should be scrapped.

Protesters also said the century-old grade two listed structure was ugly and would spoil views across the bay if it was put there.

Since the bridge was taken down from Oystermouth Road for safety reasons more than a year ago, its future has been uncertain. When it was moved to the Recreation Ground, the intention was initially to give it a much-needed revamp and put it back in place.

That suggestion was thrown into doubt when the cost of putting it back and maintaining it was revealed to be more than £1 million.

But a decision was delayed following a £35,000 public consultation exercise which proved inconclusive.

Friday, June 10, 2005

UTTER WASTE OF OUR CASH

10 June 2005

Come and see Swansea's showpiece waste of money. These were my thoughts as I drove passed the Slip Bridge - now entombed in scaffolding poles and polythene - on the Recreation Ground in Mumbles Road.

Surely the money being wasted on this farce would have been better spent in local schools and hospitals.

The bridge was an eyesore and should have been removed years ago.

I wait with foreboding the span being moved to the seafront.I hope Swansea Council, even at this late stage, will come to its senses and consign the bridge to the scrapyard where it belongs.

Ray Durran
Llangyfelach
Swansea

Saturday, June 04, 2005

UGLY FACE OF THE FUTURE

04 June 2005

Swansea Council's decision to preserve the old Slip Bridge for posterity by siting it on the promenade opposite St Helen's is a prime example of wistful nostalgia being allowed to degenerate into mawkish sentimentality.

A configuration of iron girders resembling a pair of gigantic coat hangers can only detract from the visual splendour of the coastline. Transplanted onto the scenic vistas of Swansea Bay, it will have all the incongruity of a clapped out old banger abandoned in the centre of a rose garden.

The hallmark of any civic amenity lies in its practical usefulness, its value as an historical artefact or in it being a structure of architectural merit, and this ugly, meccano-like construction has none of these qualities.

While it might for older citizens evoke memories of a calmer past when there was more respect for authority and more clearly defined roles for men and women, the mind is curiously selective and may blank out the realities of 50 years ago when lack of opportunity and social deprivation were a fact of life for many.

Unsightly and superfluous, this blast from the past will be a safety hazard for those irresponsible urchins the city seems to breed in such numbers and who have such a cavalier disregard for their own safety.

The preservation of the Swansea foreshore is more important than the embalming in nostalgia of an old iron bridge of First World War vintage, while an obsession with the mundane objects of the past is not always healthy.

Councillors should concentrate their financial resources on projects of more immediate relevance and undertakings of greater vision.

Stuart Walters
Llwyn Carw
Morriston