This brick built single arch bridge is an aqueduct carrying the Bridgewater Canal over the old line of the A56 road to Chester. Before the toast rack bridge was built and Chester road extended into a dual carriageway at the Walton & Daresbury ends, Chester road actually passed underneath this bridge. Once the road was diverted to allow a much better flow of two-way traffic, the short section of road beneath the canal became known as ‘underbridge lane’. In recent years there is no traffic allowed beneath the bridge presumably to prevent it becoming an unsuitable entry road for Moore. This bridge is a Historic England Grade II listed building with following text. "Aqueduct circa 1770, by James Brindley for the Duke of Bridgewater, of stone-dressed brick. The deep segmental arch on walls with a slight concave batter, dips towards the centre beneath the canal. The intrados has 3 projecting stone bands which terminate as keystones. The splayed brick abutments, battered in section, have plain projecting copings of stone and a flush stone band at the level of the arch springers. A raised sandstone pavement on west side of road beneath the archway. Plain C20 brick parapet to towpath on north bank."