Hampden Bridge. Kangaroo Valley, NSW, Australia.
S 34° 43.635 E 150° 31.255
56H E 273006 N 6154404
The historical Hampden Bridge, the oldest suspension bridge in Australia, is located in Kangaroo Valley.
Waymark Code: WMVB51
Location: New South Wales, Australia
Date Posted: 03/26/2017
Views: 12
Hampden Bridge is a suspension bridge across the Kangaroo River, located in the Australian town of Kangaroo Valley, New South Wales. A well-known local tourist attraction, the bridge features four large crenellated turrets made of locally quarried sandstone.
Hampden Bridge is the only surviving suspension bridge from the colonial period in New South Wales. It was designed by Ernest Macartney de Burgh, the colony's Assistant Engineer for Bridges, to replace the decaying timber truss bridge which originally spanned the Kangaroo River. Its medieval style is an example of the Gothic Revival architecture popular in late nineteenth-century Australia. Construction began in 1895 and the bridge was opened on the 19 May 1898, just six days before floods washed the old bridge away.
The bridge is named after Lord Hampden, Governor of New South Wales from 1895 to 1899. It is 77 metres long (252 ft) and one lane wide.
Register of the National Estate (Non-statutory archive)
Class Historic
Legal Status Registered (18/04/1989)
Place ID 1621
Place File No 1/11/102/0049
Year built. 1895-1898
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