Port Phillip Bay Bridge proposals

The Port Phillip Bay Bridge proposals have been suggested as a means of linking Queenscliff and Sorrento via a bridge and therefore eliminating the need of a ferry as the only way of transport across the waterway.[1]

Such a bridge would need to span a 3.1-kilometre (1.9 mi) stretch of water known as "The Rip" between Queenscliff and Portsea, Victoria in order to connect the Bellarine Highway and the Mornington Peninsula Freeway. If it were built as a suspension bridge, this would probably give the proposed bridge the longest central span of any suspension bridge in the world.[2]

In a preliminary proposal put forward by David Broadbent [who?] in March 1998, 10 possible routes were evaluated. Only one [which?] of these routes was considered to be viable. Based on this preferred crossing, the bridge would have a landfall to landfall distance of 5.7 km (3.5 mi), with a main span of 2.5 km (1.5 mi). The air draft of the bridge was calculated at 70 metres.

In March 2023 the Mayor of Mornington Peninsula Steve Holland supported an idea for the bridge.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ MURPHY, NOEL (27 November 2009). "Bridge too far ... maybe not". Geelong Advertiser. Archived from the original on 4 December 2018. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  2. ^ Transport Problem: Negotiating Port Phillip Bay Adapted from a first year civil engineering report – this report was an exercise in brainstorming alternatives, RMIT Engineering Faculty
  3. ^ https://www.heraldsun.com.au/leader/south-east/mornington-peninsula-mayor-proposes-bridge-between-sorrento-and-queenscliff/news-story/7763cc3b04e9658586d0afcf8b88fc8f