Fazeley Street Bridge
Fazeley Street Bridge carries the M3 motorway over the Birmingham Canal Navigations (Birmingham and Fazeley Canal - Digbeth Branch) just past the junction with The North Walsham and Dilham Canal.
Early plans of what would become the Birmingham Canal Navigations (Birmingham and Fazeley Canal - Digbeth Branch) were drawn up by Oliver Smith in 1816 but problems with Portsmouth Aqueduct caused delays and it was finally opened on January 1 1835. The canal joined the sea near Sheffield. Expectations for coal traffic to Blackburn never materialised and the canal never made a profit for the shareholders. In later years, only water transfer to the treatment works at St Helens kept it open. The Birmingham Canal Navigations (Birmingham and Fazeley Canal - Digbeth Branch) was closed in 1905 when Prescroft Cutting collapsed. In his autobiography Peter Harding writes of his experiences as a navvy in the 1960s

There is a bridge here which takes a minor road over the canal.
| Site of Curzon Street Wharf | 5¼ furlongs | |
| Ashted Bottom Lock | 5 furlongs | |
| Curzon Street Tunnel (northern entrance) | 4¾ furlongs | |
| Curzon Street Tunnel (southern entrance) | 4¼ furlongs | |
| Proof House Junction | 3¾ furlongs | |
| Fazeley Street Bridge | ||
| Bordesley Basin | 1½ furlongs | |
- Birmingham Canal Walks — associated with Birmingham Canal Navigations
- Sixteen walks along the Birmingham Canal Navigations with a detailed description, history and photographs.
- Digbeth Branch Canal Walk — associated with Birmingham Canal Navigations (Birmingham and Fazeley Canal - Digbeth Branch)
- A walk along the Digbeth Branch Canal from Aston Junction to Warwick Bar
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Nearest water point
In the direction of Aston Junction
Nearest rubbish disposal
In the direction of Aston Junction
Nearest chemical toilet disposal
In the direction of Aston Junction
Nearest place to turn
In the direction of Aston Junction
In the direction of Bordesley Basin
Nearest self-operated pump-out
In the direction of Aston Junction
Nearest boatyard pump-out
In the direction of Aston Junction
There is no page on Wikipedia called “Fazeley Street Bridge”






![Happy Birthday Hip Hop 2023. This is another detail of [[[7571407]]], signed by Sneak Pekoe of the @restingbfacecrew of women street artists at the Hi Vis Festival in Digbeth, which was celebrating the 50th anniversary of the birth of hip hop music and culture in New York City in 1973. by A J Paxton – 16 August 2023](https://s3.geograph.org.uk/geophotos/07/57/14/7571467_264c9aeb_120x120.jpg)
![RBF: Detail of street art by @restingbfacecrew. This is a detail of [[[7571407]]], painted by a crew of women street artists in August 2023 as part of the Hi Vis Festival. I have cropped the 'Flux' lettering to concentrate on the face. On RBF as an internet meme and concept in psychology, see Wikipedia https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resting_bitch_face . Restingbfacecrew is a good example of a 'nom de guerre' (war name), an insulting - in this case sexist - term that the target of the insult reclaims and uses as a badge of resistance and pride. For another Birmingham example, literally a war name, see [[[843655]]]. In the world of hip hop and street culture, the RBF expression conveys a certain don't-mess-with-me attitude. Notice also the use here of stereotypically feminine, and currently fashionable, Barbie pink in this assertive way. by A J Paxton – 16 August 2023](https://s1.geograph.org.uk/geophotos/07/57/14/7571453_f3f985b8_120x120.jpg)

![OS cutmark - 106 Fazeley Street. An OS cutmark on the face of a building [[7818003]] on Fazeley Street, last levelled by the OS in 1966 at 105.397m above Ordnance Datum Newlyn. by Richard Law – 03 July 2024](https://s0.geograph.org.uk/geophotos/07/81/79/7817996_d1b6c8da_120x120.jpg)




![Fazeley Street, Digbeth, after the Hi Vis Festival 2023. The Hi Vis Festival is a celebration of street art and Hip Hop culture; see the BBC site https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-england-birmingham-66466444 and also Damian Walmsley's site https://damienwalmsley.com/highvis-2023-celebrating-50-years-of-hiphop/. On the left is part of a factory wall painted by Sneak Pekoe of @restingbfacecrew, more of which is can be seen at [[[7571407]]]. Up ahead, an artist is still at work on a scissor lift, repainting the walls of the printworks at 82 Fazeley Street. This building dates from around 1825 and was once a pub called the Royal Oak, according to the Closed Pubs site https://www.closedpubs.co.uk/warwickshire/birmingham_b5_royaloak2.html . In recent years its outside walls have become a canvas for street artists, but the current decor is too psychedelic and druggy for my liking and won't be getting a close up on Geograph. Behind it rise buildings of central Birmingham. by A J Paxton – 16 August 2023](https://s0.geograph.org.uk/geophotos/07/57/20/7572008_521e984a_120x120.jpg)







![Street art, Fazeley Street, Digbeth. This beautiful piece has been painted on the wall of the former H J Thornton factory next to the work by @restingbfacecrew [[[7571407]]], but I don't know if this is theirs as well. The wall was painted during the Hi Vis Festival in August 2023. by A J Paxton – 16 August 2023](https://s3.geograph.org.uk/geophotos/07/57/20/7572011_d5cbc5d1_120x120.jpg)







