Remains Of Old Castle Bridge, Medieval road bridge in Warwick, England.
The Remains of Old Castle Bridge spans the River Avon with three intact central arches and fragments scattered along both banks. The piers display medieval stone carving features including curved cutwater elements that directed water around the supports.
Documentation places the bridge's existence from 1208 onward, with substantial damage requiring repairs by 1373. A major flood in 1795 destroyed most of the remaining structure, leaving only the fragments visible today.
The structure reveals how medieval builders adapted their craft to local river conditions, shaping stone arches to withstand water flow. The remaining fragments show the skill that local craftspeople brought to a bridge serving everyday travel and trade.
The best vantage point is from the riverside path near the castle, where the ruins become clearly visible from the water's edge. Walking along the bank is straightforward, though conditions can be muddy depending on recent rainfall and the season.
Historical records indicate the bridge once had roughly twelve arches, making it far more extensive than the fragments remaining today. The scale of the 1795 flood's destruction becomes clearer when standing before what little survives of that much larger crossing.
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