Saturday, May 16, 2015

Neo-Palladian Bridge Part 1...


Above: Yours truly basking on the Palladian bridge at Stowe.

Every country estate needs gates, follies, a lake, and a bridge. Our visit to Stowe confirmed in me a case of 'bridge envy'. Wouldn't it be lovely to have a Palladian bridge like the one above? 

However, everything must be in scale and if one is creating a smaller country estate, one needs a scaled down lake and a scaled down bridge. I have shared some of my thoughts previously about choosing a bridge. I was dead set on having a Palladian styled bridge, but would have to find something which would fit the scale of our lake (currently being relined and re-landscaped for the third time). This one below has a classical form on a small scale. I thought it was the perfect homage to Stowe...


... until I saw these pictures of the bridge at Chiswick House. Our bridge needs to flare out at either end, so the Chiswick House bridge was a good design to fuse with the first little bridge to create the right one for WBP.

 Above and Below: The Palladian Bridge at Chiswick House, London.

So I got to work on Photoshop and reusing elements that were already being cast for the balcony balustrade and urns that we can make casts of from around the garden, I came up with this design...



Our bridge started with the help of my uncle, David, who helped Peter to excavate the dirt out of the near end of the brook where it will flow out from the lake. They dug out a swelling ready to have the culvert laid.


He had made a circular template of the culvert girth with hose pipe, and allowed for the flaring at one end.


The concrete company then came and placed the very large culvert in the gap, which fitted perfectly. The culvert is deceptively big, you may not realise from this photo that it is over 2m long and over 1m in diametre...


This photo with Peter standing next to it gives it some scale...
Above: The view over bridge to be, towards Badger's Wood and The Manor.

Below: View back the other way.

Below: View from Elysian Fields back towards the bridge to be, with the Willows and Brook on the left and the back of Badger's Wood on the right.

Below: One of the Dietes grandiflora orchids which run the length of the brook, in flower.

Other neoclassical bridges that provided inspiration include these two slightly arched bridges...

And the Palladian Bridge at Wilton House (differing slightly from the one at Stowe in that it has steps at either end)... 

 A sweet little bridge similar to the the first one we liked... 

Below: The footings going in...

Then the walls being put up...

The brook dries up to being non-existant over most of summer, with only the dietes marking the boundary on one side. Once they are more established one won't be able to tell the bed is dry unless one looks closely. Over winter it is full the entire season.

Below: The approach to the bridge from the house via the newly laid path..

Below: Peter looking at the bridge with the empty lake, liner now removed, on the left.

Now we just need the balusters and plinths to be placed, and the sides to be rendered in plaster. More pics this July when it is finished...

2 comments:

  1. I have been to Prior Park, Chiswick, Wilton and Chatsworth, but not Stowe. And I agree that families definitely do need a bridge over the body of water in the grounds of their homes.

    But it has to be there for the right reason. The garden has to be set in a sweeping space where visitors can enjoy the fine views – then a bridge a la Palladio or Capability Brown would be perfectly natural :)

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  2. Yes, agreed - bridges are ideally functional, but it is nice when they can make an architectural statement as well. Ours serves the purpose of letting one perambulate around the lake and up onto the little hill where we plan to have a folly from whence you can take in the view across the park to the manor. I will miss jumping the ditch on horseback (which was a favourite thing for Rawdy and I to do when we rode around the park).

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