 
            Workers continue to push ahead with three prestige crossings in the UK while Norway considers using wood to build a major bridge    
The 
Under construction is a six-lane cable-stayed structure with three towers that will span the Mersey River’s expansive mud flats between the towns of Runcorn and Widnes near Liverpool.
Including the approach viaducts on each side, the project will be 2.3km long with a river span of 1km. The main bridge deck will be reinforced concrete. The 80m-high central tower will be shorter than the two outer towers, where the north tower will be 110m high and the south tower will reach 125m.
The deck is being built outwards from each of the three pylons at a rate of around 6m a week. 
As  well as being linked to each other, the north and south main bridge  deck sections also need to be linked to the approach roads – the  viaducts built over the saltmarsh and the canals – approaching the  river.
“We have now linked  the sections of deck together by bridging the gap between the two decks  with four steel restraint struts that resemble giant bolts and a  concrete pour,” said Hugh O’Connor, general manager of Merseylink, the  consortium building the bridge.
“Once  the concrete has set, the decks are further locked together with  external post-tensioned tendons. This is a major step for the project  and we remain on target to complete the final three joins this summer  with the bridge expected to open to traffic this autumn.”
It  took around two hours to pour 40m³ of concrete to fill the 2m gap  between the north approach viaduct and north pylon deck span.
“We  could complete the pour only once the form traveller was moved into  position and the mould had set. The gap between sections was only two  metres wide, but runs the entire 32 metres width of the bridge deck,”  said O’Connor. “Around 18 hours after the pour, the concrete sets to  full load-bearing strength.”
Merseylink  Consortium was appointed by Halton Borough Council to a 30-year design,  build, finance and operate contract. Equity partners are 
Progress in Sunderland
     Meanwhile,  across England, off the north-east coast, workers are preparing to  install cable stays on the city of Sunderland’s new bridge. The New Wear  Crossing is on track for opening in 2018, improving the links between  the A19 and the city centre and Port of Sunderland.
Global structural engineering company 
Each  tube will contain between 45 and 85 strands about the diameter of an UK  penny coin and have the capacity to lift 7tonnes. A tube containing the  maximum 85 wire strands will have the capacity to lift 595tonnes.
Before  the cables can be installed, however, 674 concrete deck panels  must be  joined, or stitched, together. Workers are now pouring concrete  into the  joins between the panels, connecting them to the steel deck  frame that  supports them. Once the stitching on the south side of the  deck is  complete, the cable installation can begin. Work is also  continuing to  assemble the remaining 40m of bridge deck on the north  side of the  river, which is due to be complete later this summer. Once  finished, it  will bring the deck to its final span of 330m, explained  Stephen  McCaffrey, project director for FVB, a joint venture of 
Farrans   Construction operates as a building and civil engineering contractor   across the UK and Ireland. Victor Buyck is based in Belgium and is one   of Europe's major structural steelwork contractors, specialising in   steel bridges. FVB JV is being supported by a design team led by Buro   Happold Engineering and Roughan & O'Donovan, and independent checker   
Norwegian wood
     Norway could be home to the world’s longest wooden bridge if the government gives the go-ahead for a span across Lake Mjosa.
In    a new report, researchers conclude that it is possible, both    technically and economically, to build a 1.7km wooden bridge between the    towns of Biri and Moelv. Importantly, the report notes that there   would  be little construction cost difference between a wooden and   concrete  structure.
Estimates   for a  wooden bridge are around €420 million while a concrete  structure  would  come in about €410 million, according to Trond Arne  Stensby,  project  manager at the Norwegian Public Roads Administration -  
The    468m-deep Lake Mjøsa is one of the deepest in Europe and the    fourth-deepest lake in Norway. It stretches for 117km and is about 15km    at its widest. The lake is 123m above sea level and lies about 100km    north of the capital Oslo.
One    bridge already crosses the lake, the Mjøsa Bridge that was opened  1985   and is part of the main north-south highway in Norway, the E6.  The   concrete box girder bridge has spans of around 69m and rests on  piles in   water up to 40m deep. The bridge has two lanes of traffic and  separate   pedestrian and cycling lanes.
Previous    studies have considered a four-lane link on Highway E6 between the    cities of Hamar and Lillehammer – site of the 1994 Winter Olympics.    Timber construction alternatives include a truss structure with two    underlying trusses composite with a concrete bridge deck. Typical cable    stay span width is 69m.
Walking the Queensferry
     Back     in the UK, the Scottish government recently announced that the     Queensferry Crossing will open to traffic on August 30. The bridge will     then briefly close to traffic on September 2 and 3 to allow the  public    to take part in what the government is calling a  once-in-a-lifetime    chance to walk over the new structure.
But     the number of walkers will be limited to 50,000, for which spaces  are    up for grabs through a ballot – the Queensferry Crossing  Experience.
The    new  €1.53 billion bridge is the centrepiece of a major upgrade to the     important transport corridor across the Firth of Forth near the    Scottish  capital Edinburgh. The 2.7km structure will be the longest    three-tower,  cable-stayed bridge in the world and also by far the    largest to feature  cables which cross mid-span to provide extra    strength and stiffness,  allowing the towers and the deck to be more    slender and elegant.
In     total, the overall Forth Replacement Crossing scheme - of which the new     bridge is part - is 22km long, including major motorway upgrades to   the   north and south of the bridge and also the first ever use in   Scotland   of variable mandatory speed limits to smooth traffic   congestion via an   Intelligent Transport System. This also controls   dedicated bus lanes   within the motorway hard shoulders – another first   in Scotland.
The     existing 2.5km Forth Road Bridge was one of the longest suspension     bridges in the world when it opened in 1964 to connect Edinburgh, at     Queensferry, to Fife, at North Queensferry. Opening the new Queensferry     Crossing will allow the Forth Road Bridge to be used as a public     transport corridor for buses and taxis and possibly trams.
 
        
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
