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Pier

A pier is a seaside platform extended out into the sea, designed for pleasure or entertainment, often as an additional attraction in places with a beach. There are many in the United Kingdom, and there are also piers in Scheveningen, Blankenberge, etc. A pier may be open air, closed, or partly open, partly closed. Sometimes a pier has two decks.

Table of contents
1 Piers in the UK
2 History of the pier
3 List of towns with piers
4 See also
5 External link

Piers in the UK

Piers were found in all fashionable seaside towns during the Victorian era, and are still retained by many. The most well known piers are perhaps at Brighton in East Sussex, while the longest is at Southend-on-Sea at 1.25 miles (2 km) long. Wigan Pier was the subject of a well known Music Hall joke, since the name was given to a small jetty used to load canal barges - besides which Wigan is miles from the sea. It became world famous after George Orwell entitled a book of social commentary The Road to Wigan Pier. In 2002 it was stated in Parliament that there were 80 piers in England that had been designated by the Government as listed buildings. However this conflicts with the total figure of 55 piers given by the National Piers Society.

History of the pier

The first pier in the UK was opened in
1814 at Ryde on the Isle of Wight, to allow steamboat ferries to and from the mainland to moor.

List of towns with piers

England

\n*
Blackpool\n*Brighton (with photograph)\n*Clacton\n*Cleethorpes\n*Clevedon\n*Eastbourne\n*Paignton\n*Southend-on-Sea\n*Southwold\n*Teignmouth\n*Weston-super-Mare

Wales

\n*
Colwyn Bay\n*Llandudno\n*Penarth\n*Swansea (Mumbles)

Rest of the world

See also

\n*
List of United Kingdom topics

External link

\n*
National Piers Society

"There is only one nature - the division into science and engineering is a human imposition, not a natural one. Indeed, the division is a human failure; it reflects our limited capacity to comprehend the whole." - Bill Wulf