London's iconic Tower Bridge celebrates its 125th anniversary on Sunday by showing off the weird and wacky alternative designs that were nearly built instead.
The globally-recognised landmark which opens and closes for large boats plying the River Thames, has become one of the symbols of the British capital.
But it could have been very different.
The fairytale castle-style masterpiece was just one of 50 designs which vied to solve the conundrum of erecting a much-needed new bridge that would still allow large ships into what was the world's busiest port.
"There were all sorts of weird and wonderful, really creative ideas," said Tower Bridge head Chris Earlie.
"There were spiral roadways — like you would see in car parks — either side of the River Thames and then a high-level bridge," the bridgemaster said.
"One design that got quite far was a very high-level bridge with long approaches. But it was found that horses pulling carts would get exhausted before they got near the top!"
Other ideas included rotating bridges or even tunnels.
Engineer John Wolfe Barry and architect Horace Jones's winning design was a bridge that flips open in the middle, with huge chambers in the feet of two towers to accommodate the counterweights swinging down as the bridge halves swing up.
Actors in Victorian costumes will wander about, portraying the workers, engineers and bridge-users of the time.
Fireworks explode above Tower Bridge in London.
Twelve concerts are planned in the counterweight chambers inside the tower legs, featuring original compositions that can handle the ambient noise of the road above and the tidal river outside.
The chambers can accommodate 50 concert-goers, Earlie said.
Right royal debut
The bridge took eight years to build and was opened on June 30, 1894 by the future king Edward VII and queen Alexandra.
It cost about £1.6 million — just £200 million ($250 million, 225 million euros) in today's money.
The critics were sniffy, feeling its Victorian Gothic style was pastiche and unambitious.
However, it very quickly became a much-admired London landmark.
In its first year, the steam-powered bridge was opened more than 6,000 times.
A handout archive picture taken in 1893 shows Tower Bridge under construction in London.
Now run on oil and electricity, it opens around 850 times a year, mainly for tourist vessels, which must give 24 hours' notice.
River traffic takes precedence over the road and some cheeky captains make their masts a bit taller just to get the bridge to open.
Some 213 feet (65 metres) tall and 801 feet (244 metres) long, it is the last bridge downstream in London and is crossed by more than 40,000 pedestrians and 21,000 vehicles per day.
Fairytale on the river
"There is still nothing like it in the world," said Earlie.
"It is a steel and iron structure of three different types of bridge: a suspension, a girder and a bascule bridge," he said.
"But because it's covered in this fantastic Portland stone and Cornish granite it means it's a fairytale castle on the river."
The bridge is popular with British and European tourists but the biggest growth in visitor numbers is from China and the United States.
Athletes depart from Tower Bridge at the start of the men's marathon athletics event.
It is often mistakenly called London Bridge — its upstream neighbour, now a mundane 1970s concrete construction — but takes the error as a compliment, quipped Earlie.
Some 864,652 people visited the inside of the attraction in 2018. The ticket money goes to the City of London's charitable arm, raising more than £6 million per year.
The bridge continues to inspire copycat structures around the world.
There is a four-tower version in Suzhou in China and early soundings for one in the Philippines.
The original remains a draw in the social media age, providing a defining image of a trip to London.
Earlie said: "Everyone seems to have a story about Tower Bridge, or an emotional connection to it."
Agence France-Presse