The Tasman Bridge Disaster Occurred in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, 1975_Au Memories

   

The Tasman Bridge was open to traffic in August 1964 in Hobart, the capital city of Australia’s island state of Tasmania. It was a four-lane, high level concrete bridge constructed with a central navigation span for shipping. Prior to 1964, a floating bridge spanned the Derwent.

 
The Tasman Bridge disaster occurred in Hobart, Tasmania (Australia) on January 5, 1975. 12 people lost their lives; these cars left dangling over the edge were some of the lucky ones.

On Sunday, January 5, 1975 at 9.27 p.m. the bulk carrier Lake Illawarra collided with the Tasman Bridge. Two piers collapsed along with 127 meters of bridge decking. Four cars ran over the gap which fell 45m (150ft) into the Derwent River. Five occupants died while several others managed to escape from two vehicles which teetered on the edge of the gap. Seven crewmen from the Lake Illawarra also lost their lives.

The bulk carrier Lake Illawarra, carrying 10,000 tonnes of zinc ore concentrate, was heading up the Derwent River to offload its cargo at the Electrolytic Zinc Company in Risdon, upstream from Hobart and about 3 km from the bridge.


 
Tasman Bridge disaster, January 1975

The ship was off course as it neared the bridge, partly due to the strong tidal current but also because of inattention by the ship's master, Captain Boleslaw Pelc. Initially approaching the bridge at eight knots, Pelc slowed the ship to a 'safe' speed. Although the Lake Illawarra was capable of passing through the bridge's central navigation span, the captain attempted to pass through one of the eastern spans.


 
Tasman Bridge disaster, January 1975

The collapse of Tasman Bridge isolated two sides of the city which had heavily relied upon it for most daily activities. 30% of Hobart's residents lived on the eastern shore and were effectively isolated. The day after the incident, as some 30,000 residents set out for work, they found that the former three-minute commute over the bridge had turned into a ninety-minute trip.

 
The gap between the two pylons of the bridge seen in the light of day.

 

 
Murray Ling moves the car next to his back from the brink.

 

 
Cars hanging over the edge of the bridge.

 

Cars on edge taken just after the accident.

 

 
People line up for the ferry during Tasman Bridge disaster, 1975.