Bridge The Old Como railway bridge was completed in 1885 as a part of the original
Illawarra railway line infrastructure. It is a very fine example of a single track steel lattice girder bridge of the 1870s and 1880s. Como is the longest single track steel lattice
girder bridge in NSW and the only such bridge within of
Sydney. It was a notorious bottleneck within five years of its completion when the single track on either side of the bridge was increased to a double track. The double tracks converged to a single "
gauntlet track" on the bridge, which enabled trains to cross in either direction without chain points and with a relative degree of safety. It was one of only a few installations of this type in NSW.
Sydney Water Between 1935 and 1942, the
Metropolitan Water Sewerage and Drainage Board built a new diameter pipeline to pump water from the recently completed
Woronora Dam to the Board's reservoirs at
Penshurst. The pipeline was carried over the
Georges River on the Como railway bridge, supported on new steel outriggers cantilevered from the main girders. To maintain an evenly balanced load, the pipeline was split into two diameter mains, one supported on each side of the bridge. The old Como railway bridge was finally superseded in 1972 by a new double track reinforced concrete bridge, built alongside the existing bridge. Responsibility for the old bridge was transferred to the Metropolitan Water Sewerage and Drainage Board, now Sydney Water.
Sutherland and
Georges River Councils, the local authorities on either side of the river, shared the cost of converting the railway track to an extensively used
cycleway and
footpath, which opened in 1985, 100 years after the construction of the bridge. In the late 1990s, Sydney Water undertook upgrading works to the pipeline and maintenance gantries to repair leaks and comply with current OH & S requirements. == Description ==