Eugenius Birch (20 June 1818 – 8 January 1884) was a 19th-century England seaside architect, civil engineer and noted builder of promenade-.
On 19 February 1839, Birch was elected a Graduate of the Institution of Civil Engineers, becoming a Member on 5 May 1863. In 1845 he formed a general design engineering partnership with his brother, John Brannis Birch, which worked across various projects including railways (such as the East Indian Railway from Calcutta to Delhi), viaducts and bridges (including the Kelham and West Stockwith bridges).
He also designed the Devon and Somerset Railway, Exmouth Pier, Ilfracombe harbour, West Surrey waterworks and Brighton Aquarium, the oldest operational aquarium in the world.
In 1853, a group of Margate businessmen approach Birch to build the first screw-pile pier in Britain. In its design and construction, he brought two innovations: firstly, stylistic innovations directly influenced by his travels, and secondly, the adoption of screw blade added to iron piles making for a deeper and far more resilient base support. The result was a stylish and resilient Margate Pier, which survived storms and two world wars until it was destroyed by a storm in January 1978. The pier's foundations survive to this day, despite direct attempts at demolition.
The Margate pier led to a series of new commissions, which eventually ran to 14 piers in total, the most famous of which is the West Pier, Brighton. On top of this he designed the piled Royal Netley Hospital pier. His effect on pier construction techniques can be measured in the fact that, from 1862 to 1872, 18 new pleasure piers were built, the majority using screw piling. His last pier was at Plymouth, opened in the year he died, 1884.
In the BBC Radio 2 sitcom It Sticks Out Half a Mile (the radio sequel to Dad's Army), Birch is the builder of the fictional Frambourne-on-Sea pier.
Margate Pier, Margate | 1855–57 | Closed 1976 | First iron pier. Also known as Margate Jetty. Hit by storm-driven ship 1 January 1877. Hit by storm 11 January 1978. The wrecked pier remained for several years, surviving several attempts to blow it up, before final demolition though part of pier head remains. | |
North Pier, Blackpool | 1862–63 | R Laidlaw and Son, Glasgow | Open | Grade II-listed. The oldest remaining example of a Birch pier. |
West Pier, Brighton | 1863–66 | R Laidlaw and Son, Glasgow | Closed 1975 | Major sections collapsed in late 2002, and two fires in March and May 2003 left little of the original structure. Structured demolition took place in 2010 to make way for the observation tower i360; further structural damage from storms has occurred since. |
Deal Pier | 1864 | R Laidlaw and Son, Glasgow | Final demolition 1954 | Hit by ship 1940, destroying 200 feet of ironwork. Demolished by the army. Final demolition 1954. Replaced by a concrete pier, which opened in 1957. |
Lytham Pier | 1864–65 | R Laidlaw and Son, Glasgow | Closed 1938. Demolished March/April 1960 | In October 1903, sliced in two by drifting barges and repaired. The pavilion destroyed by fire in 1927. |
Aberystwyth Royal Pier | 1865 | JE Dowson | Open | Grade II listed. Following storm damage, the pier is currently a third of its original length. |
Eastbourne Pier | 1866–72 | Open | Grade II*-listed. The pier's arcade building, called the Blue Room, was destroyed in a fire in 2014. However, the pier continues to attract healthy numbers of visitors. | |
Birnbeck Pier, Weston-super-Mare | 1867 | Closed 1994 | Grade II*-listed. Having purchased the pier in July 2023, North Somerset Council started restoration work on Birnbeck Pier, the only pier in the country to link to an island, in 2024. | |
New Brighton Pier | 1867 | JE Dowson | Closed 1972 | Demolished 1977. |
Scarborough North Pier | 1866–69 | J E Dowson and another | Destroyed 1905 | Destroyed by storms in 1905. Entrance building remained until 1914. |
Hastings Pier | 1869–72 | R Laidlaw and Son, Glasgow | Open | Re-opened in 2016 following a major restoration project. |
Hornsea Pier | 1880 | Demolished 1897 | Demolished following financial difficulties. | |
Bournemouth Pier | 1880 | Open | Pier head rebuilt in concrete in 1960, followed by the neck in 1979. Pier zip-line built in 2014. | |
Plymouth Pier | 1884 | Demolished 1953 | Demolished 1953 following WWII bombing in 1940. |
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