What a shame - though I appreciate the cost saving.
It would be curious to know what the law is on that swing bridge. Presumably the Cambrian coast ones - Barmouth and the Dovey crossing whose name escapes me - were both stipulated as there were wharves upstream of the crossing points - though the new line was then ruinous for cargoes by sea. I was surprised to read that the swing span was last operated - for test purposes - around 1987 - surely someone must have taken photos. It's surely not the case that some yachtsman could rock up to the forthcoming fixed span and assert that they have the legal powers to insist that Network Rail swing it to allow passage.
Also, if 'Dovey Plan 'A; for the line to Aberystwith had happened, that would have needed two opening spans in the two bridges that that route would have involved.
(And if 'Dovey plan 'A' for the line up the coast, a bridge across the mouth of the estuary, that would have given the estuary a third, which would have resulted in shipping on the Dovey experiencing the pffaff of three opening bridges, one after the other.)
Also, I need to find a source for my belief that the signalling on the Cambrian Coast line at first wasn't red/amber/green but instead was white and violet in order to avoid confusing the cardigan bay shipping.
Mark
The ability of the bridge to swing will have been one of the conditions in the original Act of Parliament which authorised the railway, I'm sure. Some kind of legislation would have had to be invoked to remove the obligation from Network Rail
As a railway signalling pedant, I'm going to mention that there are no amber railway signals. Traffic lights have an amber aspect, but for railway signals it's yellow
Green used to be the colour for caution on signals, with a white light being the clear/proceed aspect in hours of darkness. It all changed in around the 1920s for fixed signals. But for handsignals, green was still the aspect indicating slow-down, or caution, and white was the "all right". I'm not up-to-date as to whether these hand signals remain a thing, with so little by way of shunting moves these days and the advent of radio comms