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Disused rail viaduct over the Spey at Garmouth fails
 
Disused rail viaduct over the Spey at Garmouth fails
Posted by Mark A at 12:22, 14th December 2025
 
Double checked another report to ensure the images weren't A.I. but unfortunately this is real. Looks to be that scour has felled one of the masonry piers supporting one of the smaller steel spans.

Mark

https://www.pressandjournal.co.uk/fp/news/6915286/river-spey-viaduct-collapse/

Re: Disused rail viaduct over the Spey at Garmouth fails
Posted by Mark A at 12:28, 14th December 2025
 
More on the viaduct from the Forgotten Relics web site.

Mark

http://www.forgottenrelics.org/bridges/spey-viaduct/

Re: Disused rail viaduct over the Spey at Garmouth fails
Posted by Mark A at 12:55, 14th December 2025
 
Ah. The piers are not masonry, each pier for the approach spans is a pair of concrete-filled iron cylinders sunk to... bedrock(?) and clad in masonry, and for the supports in question, both have failed. The water is esturine and the mode of failure will prove to be informative for other similar structures. But, especially given their concrete cores, perhaps not corrosion - looking at old OS mapping, the deep water channel of the river has shifted and now bears on and surrounds the failed piers so it may be that they've simply been washed out of the ground.

Mark

Re: Disused rail viaduct over the Spey at Garmouth fails
Posted by Mark A at 12:57, 14th December 2025

Re: Disused rail viaduct over the Spey at Garmouth fails
Posted by Mark A at 13:23, 14th December 2025
 
If you have Google Earth, you can use the menu 'View/Historical imagery' for the bridge site, allowing you to leaf through a striking set of aerial images from c.1985 to the present day, showing that from 2020 the river's main channel at the bridge switched to the west bank of the Spey for what appears to be the first time in the history of the structure. It may be that 2023's Storm Babet prompted some of this.

This might prove to be a reminder that some events that we like to think of occuring at rates that we'd think of as 'Geological' with respect to time spans can actually happen quickly - long periods of quiescence and then a short spell of rapid change.

Mark

Re: Disused rail viaduct over the Spey at Garmouth fails
Posted by Trowres at 15:16, 14th December 2025
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c1m87jlv97ro

A historic former railway bridge has been cordoned off by police after a section of it collapsed into the River Spey in Moray.

The Spey Viaduct, an iron girder structure near Garmouth, was built in 1886 and while no longer used for trains, was popular with cyclists and walkers.

Images on social media showed one of its supporting stone piers was leaning at an angle and part of the metalwork had twisted and fallen into the river.

Photographs in the article.

Re: Disused rail viaduct over the Spey at Garmouth fails
Posted by Mark A at 17:39, 14th December 2025
 
In 2024, a timely FOI request to Moray Council.

Mark

http://www.moray.gov.uk/moray_standard/page_155535.html

Re: Disused rail viaduct over the Spey at Garmouth fails
Posted by bobm at 18:28, 14th December 2025
 
I have merged two topics on the subject into one purely in the interests of clarity and ease of future reference for our readers (or whatever phrase that bloke from Nailsea uses) .
 

Re: Disused rail viaduct over the Spey at Garmouth fails
Posted by stuving at 18:58, 14th December 2025
 
If you have Google Earth, you can use the menu 'View/Historical imagery' for the bridge site, allowing you to leaf through a striking set of aerial images from c.1985 to the present day, showing that from 2020 the river's main channel at the bridge switched to the west bank of the Spey for what appears to be the first time in the history of the structure. It may be that 2023's Storm Babet prompted some of this.

This might prove to be a reminder that some events that we like to think of occuring at rates that we'd think of as 'Geological' with respect to time spans can actually happen quickly - long periods of quiescence and then a short spell of rapid change.

Mark

I think the pattern of channels has been a lot more variable than that. As the linked "Forgotten Relics" article says, it was intended to protect the bridge foundations by confining the flow to the main span. But the river had other ideas, and immediately started switching its path when the river was in spate (pretty common).

The Duke of Richmond and Gordon went to court to get the GNoSR to do more to block the side arches, a case that was settled without a ruling, so it's not clear what the result was. Equally unclear is why the big local landowner wanted to favour commercial fishing by blocking the river's flood channels, and so cause the river upstream to burst its banks!

In practice the argument seems to have been about how big a flood should be kept in the main channel, before being allowed to spread wider, and who was to rebuild the cills under the side arches after the flood had broken through them. Certainly it looks as if at some stage, probably long before the railway closed, people gave up trying to bully the river. So it's been shifting the stuff that held the piers upright ever since.


Re: Disused rail viaduct over the Spey at Garmouth fails
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 19:25, 14th December 2025
 
I have merged two topics on the subject into one purely in the interests of clarity and ease of future reference for our readers (or whatever phrase that bloke from Nailsea uses) .

Erm ... excuse me ?!?

 
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