In 2003, the
urban regeneration company,
Sunderland Arc commissioned the engineering firm
Arup to assist with finding a suitable location for the siting of a new road bridge over the
River Wear. In 2004, the Canadian-American Architect
Frank Gehry undertook a study for this new river crossing. An international design competition was organised by Sunderland Arc in 2005. Several submissions were made, including one by Frank Gehry, but it was the cable-stayed design of Spence Associated that won. In 2008,
Sunderland City Council held a public consultation on the designs to see if the public would prefer the Spence design to a more basic beam bridge. The consultation showed that people in the Sunderland area were in favour of the Spence design. The council decided to back the Spence design and abandon the cheaper beam bridge option. They justified their decision on the grounds that the more ambitious design would attract more businesses to the city and thus create more jobs. The United Kingdom government then announced a contribution of £93 million towards construction and the regional development agency
One NorthEast pledged another £8.5 million, with the council funding the remaining £23 million required. The decision to build the Spence design became official Sunderland City Council policy on 9 September 2009. In November 2009, public notices on the compulsory purchase of land and new rights for the project were published including side roads orders and bridge schemes notices, made under the
Highways Act 1980. An official planning application was placed with Sunderland City Council on 7 December 2009 with a consultation expiry date of 29 October 2010. Construction was timetabled to start around 2012. On 26 May 2010, Sunderland City Council approved the planning application and the project appeared ready to go ahead. This led to a reassessment of the design, which dropped the Spence plan in favour of a simpler cable-stayed design. Roughan & O’Donovan and
BuroHappold Engineering delivered the preliminary and detailed design of the bridge with Yee Associates as architectural consultants. Between 10 and 11 February 2017, the central A-frame pylon (fabricated in
Ghent,
Belgium by Victor Buyck Steel Construction) was installed which stands at a height of , making it the tallest structure in Sunderland. The raising of the single bridge pylon marked the culmination of two years of design and planning, as well as twelve months of fabricating. ==Gallery==