Westminster Bridge, SE1

Road in/near River Thames, existing between the 1750s or before and now

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(51.50086 -0.12185, 51.5 -0.121) 
MAP YEAR:18001810182018301860190019502024 
 
Road · * · SE1 ·
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2021
Westminster Bridge links Westminster on the west side with Lambeth on the east side.

Westminster Bridge was built between 1739–1750 under the supervision of Swiss engineer Charles Labelye.

For over 600 years, the nearest Thames bridge to London Bridge had been at Kingston. A bridge at Westminster was proposed in 1664, but opposed by both the Corporation of London and watermen. A bridge was built at Putney in 1729 and the Westminster Bridge scheme finally received parliamentary approval in 1736. Financed by private capital, lotteries and grants, Westminster Bridge opened on 18 November 1750.

The bridge assisted the development of south London. Roads on both sides of the river were built and improved, including Charing Cross Road and the area around the Elephant & Castle.

By the mid-19th century the bridge was subsiding badly and expensive to maintain. The current bridge was designed by Thomas Page and opened on 24 May 1862. Since the removal of Rennie’s New London Bridge in 1967 it is the oldest road structure which crosses the Thames in central London.

Westminster Bridge is painted predominantly green, the same colour as the leather seats in the House of Commons which is on the side of the Palace of Westminster nearest to the bridge. This is in contrast to Lambeth Bridge, which is red, the same colour as the seats in the House of Lords and is on the opposite side of the Houses of Parliament.



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Main source: Wikipedia
Further citations and sources



NEARBY LOCATIONS OF NOTE
Florence Nightingale Museum The Florence Nightingale Museum is located at St Thomas’ Hospital, which faces the Palace of Westminster across the River Thames.
Westminster Westminster - heart of government.

NEARBY STREETS
Abingdon Street, SW1P Abingdon Street has linked Old Palace Yard and Millbank since at least 1593 (Westminster)
Belvedere Road, SE1 Belvedere Road was laid out between 1814 and 1827 (South Bank)
Bridge Street, SW1A Bridge Street is one of the streets of London in the SW1A postal area (Westminster)
Canon Row, SW1A Canon Row is at least one thousand year’s old (Westminster)
Chicheley Street, SE1 Henry Chichele was a 15th-century Archbishop of Canterbury. (Waterloo)
Commissioner’s Yard, SW1A Commissioner’s Yard is a small street behind New Scotland Yard (Westminster)
Curtis Green Building, SW1A Curtis Green Building can be found on Victoria Embankment (Westminster)
Dean Stanley Street, SW1P Dean Stanley Street is one of the streets of London in the SW1P postal area (Westminster)
Derby Gate, SW1A Derby Gate is one of the streets of London in the SW1A postal area (Westminster)
Dover House, SW1A Dover House is a block on Whitehall (Westminster)
Forum Magnum Square, SE1 A street within the SE1 postcode (South Bank)
Gwydyr House, SW1A Gwydyr House is a building on Whitehall (Westminster)
Horse Guards Avenue, SW1A Horse Guards Avenue stretches from Whitehall to the Embankment (Westminster)
King Street, SW1A King Street was an ancient thoroughfare between the regions of the Court and the Abbey in Westminster (Westminster)
Lambeth Palace Road, SE1 Lambeth Palace Road passes Lambeth Palace, official residence of the archbishops of Canterbury (Lambeth)
Little College Street, SW1P Little College Street is one of the streets of London in the SW1P postal area (Westminster)
Main Building, SW1A Main Building is a block on Horse Guards Avenue (Westminster)
Millbank House, SW1P Millbank House is a block on Millbank (Westminster)
Narrow Wall, SE1 Narrow Wall was, by the Tudor period, a road on the line of the old earth embankment of the River Thames (South Bank)
New Palace Yard, SW1A New Palace Yard was built by William II (William Rufus) (Westminster)
North Court, SW1 North Court is a block on Great Peter Street (Westminster)
North Court, SW1P North Court is one of the streets of London in the SW1P postal area (Westminster)
Parliament Square, SW1A Parliament Square is one of the most important squares in Westminster, home to the Houses of Parliament and Westminster Abbey (Westminster)
Parliament Street, SW1A Parliament Street is the name of the southernmost stretch of Whitehall as it meets Parliament Square (Westminster)
Portcullis House, SW1A Portcullis House is a building on Bridge Street (Westminster)
Prideux Building, SE1 Prideux Building is a block on Westminster Bridge Road (Lambeth)
Richmond House Whitehall, SW1A Richmond House Whitehall is one of the streets of London in the SW1A postal area (Westminster)
Richmond House, SW1A Richmond House is a block on Whitehall (Westminster)
Richmond Terrace Mews, SW1A Richmond Terrace Mews originally led to New Scotland Yard (Westminster)
Richmond Terrace, SW1A Richmond Terrace is on the site of Richmond House, destroyed by a fire on 21 December 1791 (Westminster)
Smith Square, SW1P Smith Square was originally developed by Sir James Smith around 1726. (Westminster)
St. Margaret Street, SW1P St Margaret Street is the road immediately outside Westminster Hall (Westminster)
The Queen’s Walk, SE1 The Queen’s Walk is a road in the SE1 postcode area (South Bank)
The Terrace, SW1A The Terrace is a road in the SW1A postcode area (Westminster)
Victoria Embankment, SW1A Victoria Embankment leads north out of the Westminster area (River Thames)
Westminster Bridge, SE1 Westminster Bridge links Westminster on the west side with Lambeth on the east side (River Thames)
Westminster House, SW1P Westminster House is sited on Millbank (Westminster)
Whitehall Court, SW1A Whitehall Court runs north from Horse Guards Avenue (Westminster)
Whitehall Gardens, SW1A Whitehall Gardens is a road in the SW1A postcode area (Westminster)
Whitehall, SW1A Whitehall is recognised as the centre of the government of the United Kingdom (Westminster)


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