Reg No
11816057
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Scientific, Technical
Original Use
Bridge
In Use As
Bridge
Date
1830 - 1835
Coordinates
262690, 210075
Date Recorded
29/05/2002
Date Updated
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Five-arch bridge over river, built 1832. Part ivy-covered walls centred on limestone ashlar rounded cutwater piers on swept battered bases having domed capping with repointed coursed cut-limestone parapets having cut-limestone coping. Series of five elliptical arches with repointed rock faced limestone ashlar radiating voussoirs centred on repointed rock faced cut-limestone keystones. Sited spanning River Barrow with unkempt banks to river.
A bridge representing an important component of the early nineteenth-century civil engineering heritage of Monasterevin with the architectural value of the composition confirmed not only by the construction in a deep grey limestone with robust rock faced dressings providing an interplay of light and shade in an otherwise monochrome palette, but also by the elegant "sweep" of the arches making a pleasing visual statement at a crossing over the River Barrow: meanwhile, a benchmark remains of additional interest for the connections with cartography and the preparation of maps by the Ordnance Survey (established 1824). NOTE: The bridge succeeded a nearby bridge erected (1771) by Charles Moore (1730-1822), sixth Earl of Drogheda, and was built 'in a direct line with the [Dublin Road] so that the former sharp and dangerous turn [was] avoided' (Lewis 1837 II, 386). A pillbox, now overgrown, was installed by the Monasterevin Local Defence Force to defend the town from potential invasion by aggressors during "The Emergency" (1939-46).