The bridge was designed by the Irish artist
Eilis O'Connell, in conjunction with
Ove Arup & Partners engineers. It was formally opened in 1999 by
Paul Boateng MP, then a
Home Office minister. The name of the bridge was attacked by then
Liberal Democrat councillor
Stephen Williams. He condemned the decision as "gesture politics", instead wanting a statue or permanent memorial to remember Bristol's role in the slave trade. Eilis O'Connell commented "The council can call it what they want, but Pero's Bridge sounds a bit political." Hundreds of people now
attach padlocks to the bridge as a sign of affection to each other. For four days in June 2020, the
Statue of Edward Colston, a Bristolian slave trader, lay at the bottom of the harbour directly south of the bridge after being toppled from its
plinth by protestors during the
George Floyd protests. It was then retrieved by the council and put in storage. It now resides as a permanent feature in Bristol's M-Shed museum shown now lying instead of standing, with all original protest graffiti maintained. In July 2025 an inspection found "major structural issues" with the bridge, which lead to the introduction of a 1 tonne weight limit and a "no lift notice" being placed on the bridge. As of September 2025 these restrictions were still in place, with Bristol City Council seeking to re-allocate £200,000 of funds to repairing the bridge in addition to removing nearly 3 tonnes of "love locks" from the bridge. == Dimensions ==