The medieval engineering strokes of genius that led to the building of Old London Bridge

Medieval bridges were marvels of engineering, given the technology available at the time — and nowhere more so than in the case of London Bridge, where deep, tidal flows made construction incredibly challenging. David Harrison explains.

Every Tuesday, we look back in Country Life’s architecture archive for a treasure of the past. Today, we examine a 2005 article describing the building of the original London Bridge, a remarkable feat of engineering given the technology available. The piece was written by David Harrison, author of The Bridges of Medieval England.

Despite our familiarity with bridges, their history has scarcely been studied. The most famous is Old London Bridge because, as the song tells us, it fell down. Engineers have often stressed that it was a clumsy structure with its piers resting on massive wooden platforms, creating a narrow, turbulent waterway, inferior to the works of the Romans and the Renaissance.

Despite its failings, it was, in fact, a remarkable work of civil engineering. It was also utterly atypical.

How so? Well, most major medieval bridges ‘were built by skilled masons’, adds David, and around 200 of them are still standing. Many more lasted until the second half of the 18th century, only to be destroyed and rebuilt purely because they weren’t wide enough for two wagons to pass.

The old Abingdon Bridge.

Their construction was carried out using ‘coffer dams’, temporary structures erected in the river which could be sealed off and drained, to allow the creation of a dry working space for laying foundations. It was a horrendous job, as David explains:

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A poem on a 15th-century memorial in Abingdon gives us an insight into bridge construction in the town and at nearby Culham. Geoffrey Barbour, a merchant, provided the huge sum of 1,000 marks. In 1416, 300 men were at work. The foundations were a major problem:

Then the strengthe of the streme astoned hem stronge...
Ther loved hem a ladde was a water man longe
He helpe stop the streme til the werke were a fore

The poem is probably describing the erection of a coffer dam in the riverbed from which water was removed with buckets, a long and gruelling job. At Albi, France, in 1408 it took several men, often working day and night, 12 days to empty one coffer dam.

A view over the River Tarn and the Pont Vieux (Old Bridge) in Albi. ©G. R. Ballance/Country Life

That solution wouldn’t work for London, however:

Laying foundations at Abingdon or Albi was difficult enough but there were a few places where it was far harder, in particular where the river was deep and tidal. The leaky riverbed of the Thames at London was an additional problem. Here, coffer dams could not be used. Instead, at old London Bridge, piles were driven into the water to create pens standing proud of the river at low tide into which rubble was thrown. The piers were built on top of the pens, but because the pens were unstable they were surrounded by other pens filled with rubble, known as starlings.

Construction took 33 years, from 1176 to 1209. A few other places required this type of construction, such as Rochester at the mouth of the Medway. Two long medieval bridges survive, a reminder of those now lost, at Barnstaple and Bideford. The latter, made famous by Charles Kingsley in Westward Ho!, has 24 arches and is more than 200m long.

Old London Bridge undoubtedly had problems: it acted as a dam, with water rushing through the narrow openings, undermining the foundations. Yet it was a remarkable achievement, lasting with just two major collapses until the 19th century, when steam engines and other technical advances offered a better way of laying foundations at London.

Old London Bridge, painted by Claude de Jongh in 1630 when it was already half a millennium old.