Park Square Bridge

Park Square Bridge, also known as the Supertram Bridge, is a prominent bridge in the City of Sheffield, England. It was constructed in 1995 using a bowstring, or tied arch design. The bridge carries the Sheffield Supertram system from Commercial Street onto the Park Square roundabout.

Coordinates: 53°22′58″N 1°27′41″W / 53.3829°N 1.4615°W / 53.3829; -1.4615

Buildings in Sheffield, England
Within Sheffield City Centre
  • Bioincubator
  • Castle Market
  • Cathedral
  • Catholic Cathedral
  • Central Library
  • City Hall
  • Cutlers' Hall
  • Dyson Housed
  • 23 Furnival Gatea
  • 1 Furnival Squareo/h
  • Glossop Road Baths
  • Hanover House
  • Howden House
  • Jessop Hospital
  • Kelham Island Industrial museum (and Brewery)
  • Lyceum
  • Millennium Galleries
  • National Centre for Popular Music
  • National Union of Mineworkers headquarters
  • Old Queen's Head, Sheffield
  • Pennine Centre
  • Owen Building
  • Redvers House
  • Old Town Hall
  • Sheaf Housed
  • 1 Sheaf Squarep
  • Showroom Cinema
  • Sir Frederick Mappin Building
  • St George's Church
  • St Matthew's, Carver Street
  • St. Paul's Towert/o
  • St Vincent's Church
  • Telephone House
  • Town Hall
  • Sydney Works
  • V1
  • Velocity Tower
  • Victoria Hall
  • West Bar schemea
  • Weston Towerp
  • Wheel of Sheffieldd*
  • Winter Gardens
In the outskirts
  • Abbeydale Industrial Hamlet
  • Abbeydale Picture House
  • Alfred Denny Building
  • Arts Tower
  • Attercliffe Chapel
  • Beauchief Abbey
  • Birley Spa
  • Broom Hall
  • Carbrook Hall
  • Church of St. Nicholas
  • The Cremorne
  • Firth Court
  • Hallam Tower
  • Hicks Building
  • Hillsborough Barracks
  • Manor
  • Moore Street electricity substation
  • Northern General Hospital
  • Octagon Centre
  • Regent Court
  • Royal Hallamshire Hospital
  • Royal Infirmary
  • Shepherd Wheel
  • Shrewsbury Hospital
  • Spital Towera
  • St Mark's Church
  • St Mary's Church
  • The Fosters
  • University House
  • Weston Park Museum
Stations past and present
  • Bridgehouses
  • Midland
  • Victoria
  • Wicker
Major complexes
  • Callow Mount
  • Crystal Peaks
  • Digital Campus
  • Heart of the City
  • Herdingspd
  • Jordanthorpepd
  • Lansdowne
  • Meadowhall
  • Netherthorpe
  • New Retail Quarter
  • Park Hill
  • Stannington Deer Park
  • Upperthorpe
  • West Bar
  • West.One
Sports and Entertainment/
Music venues
  • The Boardwalk
  • Look Local Stadium
  • Bramall Lane
  • Carling Academy
  • City Hall
  • The Cricketers
  • Crucible Theatre
  • D 'n' R
  • Don Valley Stadium
  • The Earl
  • EIS
  • Gatecrasher One d
  • Goodwin Sports Centre
  • The Grapes
  • The Harley
  • Hillsborough Park
  • Hillsborough Stadium
  • IceSheffield
  • Leadmill
  • Look Local Stadium
  • Lyceum Theatre
  • Motorpoint Arena Sheffield
  • Octagon Centre
  • Owlerton Stadium
  • Plug
  • Ponds Forge
  • Sandygate Road
  • Ski Village
  • Under The Boardwalk
Structures
  • Cholera Monument
  • Cobweb Bridge
  • Lady's Bridge
  • Park Square Bridge
  • Tinsley Viaduct
  • Totley Tunnel
  • Wicker Arches
Lists of buildings
  • Brutalist apartment blocks in Sheffield
  • Buildings and structures in Sheffield
  • Listed buildings in Sheffield source
  • a – Approved
  • d – Demolished
  • d* – Dismantled and rebuilt outside Sheffield
  • o/h – On hold
  • p – Proposed
  • pd – Part demolished
  • t/o – Topped out
  • u/c – Under construction


Famous quotes containing the words park, square and/or bridge:

    and the words never said,
    And the ominous, ominous dancing ahead.
    We sat in the car park till twenty to one
    And now I’m engaged to Miss Joan Hunter Dunn.
    Sir John Betjeman (1906–1984)

    In old times people used to try and square the circle; now they try and devise schemes for satisfying the Irish nation.
    Samuel Butler (1835–1902)

    Oh, who will now be able to relate how Pantagruel behaved in face of these three hundred giants! Oh my muse, my Calliope, my Thalie, inspire me now, restore my spirits, because here is the ass’s bridge of logic, here is the pitfall, here is the difficulty of being able to describe the horrible battle undertaken.
    François Rabelais (1494–1553)