Safety concern on Sherman’s Bridge design

December 19, 2025
1 min read

To the Editor:

I was pleased to sit in (via Zoom) on the Sudbury Historical Commission meeting on Dec. 9, when the most recent plans for the renovation of Sherman’s Bridge were discussed. Tina Rivard, Sudbury Director of Public Works, led discussants (commissioners and interested citizens) through a series of drawings and specifications, allowing all present to raise concerns regarding several issues not yet resolved. 
Among those issues still to be resolved is a glaring safety concern along the south “non-walkway” side of the bridge, as shown on sheet 8 of the plan set dated Dec. 5. The issue is a continuous gap of over 16 inches between the bottom of the glulam guardrail and the decking of the bridge. 

Two things, then:
1. This is only called the “non-walkway” side of the bridge because the current plans do not propose a pedestrian walkway on this side. The consensus of bridge users is that a walkway should in fact be placed on this side and the structural solution to do so is pretty simple and inexpensive. If you have spent any time around the bridge at all, you will understand that pedestrians regularly stand/walk on this side of the bridge. Post-renovation, they should be able to do so safely and be protected from traffic by a pedestrian walkway and a glulam crash barrier at ankle height.
 2. The concern is that a child or pet could easily slip through the gap shown in the current design and fall directly into the river. And it is the case that children and pets do use this side of the bridge as it is configured now. If this were a building rather than a bridge, of course, the Massachusetts state building code (780CMR 1021) requires a gap of no more than four inches in railings like this. 

We thank you for your good work so far and for considering this safety issue for the renovated Sherman’s Bridge. 

Jeff Stein
Sherman’s Bridge Road

Latest from Blog

Many roads closed due to rain, wind

While today’s storm isn’t a typical winter storm with snow or ice, there have been more than a dozen road closures around Wayland due to the deluge of rain and the strong

Public Safety Log

Monday, Dec. 13:02 p.m. — A 911 call from Cochituate Village Apartments (106 Main St.) stated that a resident was slamming doors and yelling.6:13 p.m. — A caller from Donelan’s Market (177

Voters narrowly approve debt service measure

dave.watkins@waylandpost.org Wayland voters approved a single ballot question at a special town election, with unofficial results showing 328 votes in favor and 297 opposed, a margin of 31 votes. A total of

Town office: what’s involved in running and serving

By Dave Watkinsdave.watkins@waylandpost.org Thinking about running for office in Wayland in 2026? Here’s what’s on the ballot, what the jobs actually involve, and what the time commitment can look like.Nomination papers for

Select Board

The Select Board on Dec. 1 continued detailed deliberations on how to finance the town’s proposed MWRA water connection and related DEP requirements, a project expected to involve roughly $38 million in

Joint meeting tackles Coptic Church proposal

The Planning Board and Conservation Commission met jointly Dec. 3 to review peer comments on the St. Philopater Mercurius & St. Mina Coptic Church and Carroll School construction projects. The Planning Board

Don't Miss