Full Report for Listed Buildings


Summary Description of a Listed Buildings


Reference Number
19452
Building Number
 
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
02/03/1998  
Date of Amendment
02/03/1998  
Name of Property
Viaduct at Morlais Junction East (partly in Grovesend community)  
Address
 

Location


Unitary Authority
Carmarthenshire  
Community
Llanedi  
Town
Swansea  
Locality
Hendy  
Easting
258182  
Northing
202527  
Street Side
 
Location
Spanning the River Loughor some 3/4 mile (1.27km) S of Hendy, on the Glamorgan-Carmarthenshire border.  

Description


Broad Class
Transport  
Period
 

History
Built by the Great Western Railway as part of the Swansea District Line (also known as the Swansea Avoiding Line) and opened on 14 July 1913. The rationale behind the line was partly to carry coal more easily from the Amman valley to Swansea docks, but more importantly to provide a fast link to London for passengers docking at Fishguard on the transatlantic route. The Edwardian period saw a rapid expansion in transatlantic passenger traffic between New York and Europe. Traditionally the port of Liverpool (3,017 nautical miles from New York) had dominated the North Atlantic route. But fierce competition between steamship companies led to its supremacy being challenged. The White Star Line was able to cut the journey time by opening a service on the shorter route between New York and Holyhead (2,943 miles) and this prompted the Cunard Company to go one better by opening Fishguard to transatlantic liners (2,902 miles) cutting the distance still further. The first Cunard liner to call at Fishguard was the Mauretania, then the largest and fastest liner afloat, which left New York at 10 a.m. on 25th August 1909 and arrived at Fishguard at 1.15 p.m. on the 30th. The passengers were in London by 8 o'clock and the mail at 6.40 the same evening. Cunard liners continued to use Fishguard regularly until 1914 with six to eight services a month, with three or four special trains usually running to London off each boat. The speed of the London rail link was critical. The building of the viaduct at Morlais Junction on the Swansea district Line allowed trains to avoid delays in Swansea by by-passing the city altogether, thus providing a faster and more reliable service. The economic importance of the line was, however, short-lived. With the outbreak of war in 1914, Fishguard fell quickly into decline, to be eclipsed after 1918 by bigger ports such as Cherbourg and Southampton.  

Exterior
Monumental viaduct some 200m long and rising over 20m above the surface of the River Loughor below. Built in red engineering brick (English bond). 11 semi-circular arches, each spanning some 30m. The five central arches have projecting breakwaters to piers. Piers have slight batter to impost level and projecting banded course (five bricks high) below springing . Arches themselves are seven bricks deep with an upper moulded brick course (roll-shaped). Wall is corbelled out in four courses below parapet. Parapet has flat stone coping and embrasures, with iron safety-rails, every second arch.  

Interior
 

Reason for designation
Historically important monument of rail engineering which forms a very prominent landmark in the lower Loughor valley.  

Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]





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