Bridge, Inse An Osaidh, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Bridges & Crossings
At Inse An Osaidh, a road bridge crosses the River Lee a short distance south-west of Ballingeary village, and what makes it worth pausing over is the quality of its construction.
Measuring just over seven and a half metres in width, it carries four semicircular arches built with cut-stone voussoirs, the precisely shaped wedge stones that lock an arch together and give it its load-bearing strength. The breakwaters, the projecting piers that protect the structure from the force of the current, are rounded rather than angular, a detail that speaks to careful, considered work rather than the utilitarian minimum.
The bridge spans the upper River Lee in a part of mid-Cork that remains largely Irish-speaking, and its placement at this particular crossing point reflects the practical demands of movement through a landscape shaped by river valleys and boggy ground. The four-arch form and the dressed stonework suggest a structure built with some ambition, though the surviving record does not attach a specific date or builder to it. What remains is the bridge itself, quietly doing the work it was made for, its cut stone and rounded breakwaters still managing the river beneath.