Fed up residents illuminate closed Hammersmith Bridge in red in Valentine’s Day protest

‘Broken hearts, broken promises, broken bridge’: Fed up residents illuminate Hammersmith Bridge in red in Valentine’s Day protest after it was closed six months ago over safety fears – and may not reopen for YEARS

  • 133-year-old west London bridge has been closed to traffic since April 2019 
  • Fed up residents projected the message to mark the six-month anniversary 
  • Organisers say it was addressed to Boris Johnson, Sadiq Khan and Grant Shapps 

Fed up residents have illuminated Hammersmith Bridge in red in a Valentine’s Day protest after it was closed six months ago and may not reopen for years.  

The 133-year-old west London bridge has been closed to traffic since April 2019 when cracks appeared in its pedestals.

It then closed to pedestrian, cyclist and river traffic in August after a heatwave caused the faults to ‘significantly increase’.

Fed up residents projected a message onto the bridge on Saturday to mark the six-month anniversary of its full closure.

The 133-year-old west London bridge has been closed to traffic since April 2019 when cracks appeared in its pedestals

Billed as the ‘UK’s biggest Valentine’s Day card’, the message reads: ‘Broken Hearts. Broken Promises. Broken Lives. Broken Bridge.’

Organisers said it was addressed to Prime Minister Boris Johnson, London mayor Sadiq Khan, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps, and Hammersmith and Fulham Council leader Stephen Cowan.

A Government task force was launched in September last year with the aim of ‘opening the bridge as speedily as possible’, Mr Shapps said.

He said at the time there had been a ‘lack of leadership in London on reopening this vital bridge’. 

It then closed to pedestrian, cyclist and river traffic in August after a heatwave caused the faults to 'significantly increase'

It then closed to pedestrian, cyclist and river traffic in August after a heatwave caused the faults to ‘significantly increase’

Fed up residents projected a message onto the bridge on Saturday to mark the six-month anniversary of its full closure

Fed up residents projected a message onto the bridge on Saturday to mark the six-month anniversary of its full closure

Helen Pennant-Rea, chairwoman of the Hammersmith Bridge SOS Residents’ Group, said the ‘Valentine’s Day card’ was intended to be a ‘fun and entertaining way to draw attention to what remains a serious issue’.

She said: ‘It is a great shame that we need to raise further attention to the complete inability of politicians from all parties to find a satisfactory solution, to proceed with the funding and works to repair Hammersmith Bridge.

‘Also, to deliver the urgently needed temporary pedestrian crossing.’

Hammersmith and Fulham Council, which owns the bridge, wrote a letter to the Prime Minister in August stating the estimated cost to make it safe and ‘avoid a potential catastrophic failure’ is £46 million.