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Rebuilding the Iconic Mizen Head Footbridge

Aerial view of a seaside town looking across a bay with a large stone gothic church in the foreground and hills and green fields in the distance

Tetra Tech rebuilt the iconic Mizen Head Footbridge at Ireland’s most southerly point—a complex engineering feat spanning a dramatic sea gorge.

After 100 years of service, the iconic Mizen Head Footbridge was demolished and we faithfully reconstructed to its original form. The complex engineering project, at Ireland’s most southerly point, was characterised by dramatic cliffs with steep, narrow footpaths and spectacular views over the Atlantic Ocean.

The project, on behalf of Fáilte Ireland, Cork County Council and the Commissioners of Irish Lights, delivered a new bridge of identical nature and form to the original structure.

The project was awarded Engineering Project of the Year in 2011 by Engineers Ireland, Overall Award 2012 by the Irish Concrete Society and a Heritage Commendation by the Institution of Structural Engineers in 2011. A paper describing the project was published in the prestigious Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers.

Challenge

The landmark bridge project provided significant challenges to the design and construction teams.  Access to the site was extremely difficult, via a steeply inclined footway, less than 1 metre wide.

It was also located in an environmentally sensitive marine location at the most south-westerly point of Ireland and was subject to severe weather due to the exposed, coastal nature of the site. The bridge had a clear span of 50m and the soffit of the deck was located 45m above a sea gorge. 

Solution

The new bridge is a structure of identical nature and form to the original structure, though marginally wider (700mm). The innovative concept allowed for the initial construction of new structural members using the old members for support.  The scheme progressed as an integrated series of demolition and construction of individual structural elements. The structure comprises an intricate framework of elements and the details of these elements were faithfully recreated from the original structure. 

We also designed additional tourism facilities during construction of the bridge. These include walkways and viewing platforms from higher viewing levels above the bridge, to enhance the visitor experience.  The bridge has developed into a major tourist attraction and is now a key attraction on the Wild Atlantic Way.

Project timeline

  • 2001: Inspection and Assessment
  • 2005: Local Strengthening
  • 2008: Preliminary Design
  • 2009: Detailed Design
  • 2010: Procurement and Contract Award
  • 2011: Construction & Completion

At a glance

Client

Fáilte Ireland, Cork County Council and the Commissioners of Irish Lights

Location

County Cork, Ireland

Services

Contract administration, detailed design, employer’s representative duties, environmental studies, feasibility study and options report, materials testing, planning, preliminary design, procurement using competitive dialogue procedure, PSDP, resident engineer services, structural inspection and assessment

The project featured in this article was undertaken by RPS, A Tetra Tech Company and originally published on RPSgroup.com. In March 2026 RPS rebranded to Tetra Tech.

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