Cullen Viaduct | |
---|---|
Coordinates | 57°41′32″N 2°49′49″W / 57.6921°N 2.8303°W |
Carries | Great North of Scotland Railway (formerly) |
Crosses | Burn of Cullen A98 |
Locale | Cullen, Moray, Scotland |
Characteristics | |
Material | Stone |
History | |
Opened | 1886 |
Statistics | |
Daily traffic | no |
Toll | no |
Location | |
The Cullen Viaduct is a former single-track railway viaduct at the Moray Firth in Cullen, Moray, Scotland.[1] Containing eight arches,[2] it formerly carried the Great North of Scotland Railway line between Portsoy in Aberdeenshire and Elgin in Moray. Crossing the Burn of Cullen[3][4] and the A98, it was built as a result of a refusal by Seafield Estate, to the south, to have the line encroach on its land.[5]
Work on the viaduct was completed in 1886,[6] under the guidance of engineer P. M. Barnett; it is now a Grade B listed structure.[5]
The line closed in 1968, and the viaduct is now used as a recreational path, part of the Moray Firth Trail and the Sustrans national cycle path.[5][6]
Three other structures are located further to the east: a single span connecting North Deskford Street to the main road, a four-arch viaduct spanning North Castle Street[7] and a four-arch bridge at the foot of Seafield Street (part of the A98), under which vehicles and pedestrians pass.[5]