Teddington Lock Footbridge
About Teddington Lock Footbridge
Teddington Lock Footbridge consists of two separate bridges throughout the River Thames in England located simply upstream of Teddington Lock at Teddington. There is a small island among the bridges. The two footbridges were constructed among 1887 and 1889, funded by way of donations from neighborhood citizens and corporations. They changed a ferry which gave its call to Ferry Road at Teddington. The western bridge includes a suspension bridge crossing the weir circulate and linking the island to Teddington.
The japanese bridge is an iron girder bridge crossing the lock reduce and linking the island to Ham on the Surrey bank. In current years timber ramps have been added to the method to the bridge on the Ham aspect and to the center element at the small island so that cycles and pushchairs and so on. You can avoid the steps up and down from that segment of the bridge. From this point downstream the Thames Path runs on both facets of the river and upstream it runs on the Surrey side only.
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