Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

A146 road

 
Wikipedia: A146 road
UK road A146.PNG
A146 road
Length (miles) 27
Length (km) 43
Direction East - West
Start Norwich (A11)
Primary
destinations1
Beccles
End Lowestoft (A12)
Roads joined UK road A11.svg A11 road
UK road A140.PNG A140 road
UK road A47.PNG A47 road
UK road A143.PNG A143 road
UK road A145.PNG A145 road
UK road A1117.PNG A1117 road
UK road A12.svg A12 road
Notes
  1. Primary destinations as specified by the Department for Transport.

The A146 is a road that runs between two of East Anglia's largest population centres - Norwich in Norfolk and Lowestoft in Suffolk.

The entire route has primary classification and as such has been improved over the years but due to the high traffic volumes progress is usually slow.

Contents

Route description

Norwich

Before the construction of the southern bypass the A146 started in the city centre at St. Stephens Roundabout (near Norwich bus station and headed out along Bracondale and out through Trowse. However according to maps it now begins just south of the roundabout as a fork from the A11 outside the site of the old Norfolk and Norwich Hospital (which has since relocated to Colney). This first section (Ipswich Road) is actually signed as the A1056 on the ground but appears as the A146 on maps! Either way it used to be the A140, which now forms the western section of the outer ringroad. The A146/A1056 meets the A140 ringroad at traffic lights where the A140 resumes its route south to Ipswich and the A146 turns to the east to take over the southern section of the ringroad. After the Tuckswood roundabout (with McDonalds) comes another change of direction as the A146 relinquishes control of the outer ringroad to the A1054 and turns right onto a dual carriageway to bypass Trowse and leave Norwich in a south-easterly direction, which it generally maintains through the rest of its journey.

Norwich to Beccles

The Trowse bypass crosses over the Great Eastern Main Line and the River Yare on a viaduct, and leads to the junction with the A47 Norwich southern bypass (which it passes under) and shortly afterwards in Bixley to a junction with the B1332 (which heads south to Bungay). Soon after the A146 returns to single carriageway, passing through Framingham Pigot, Hellington Corner and Thurton before crossing the River Chet. The speed limit drops from 60 mph (97 km/h) to 50 mph (80 km/h) and then 40 mph (64 km/h) as you pass through the village. The limit is enforced by a speed camera at the bottom of the valley. Another change to its route is Loddon which is now bypassed to the south (the original road went straight through the town). Along the route of the bypass, at the junction with Mundham Road, the speed limit (60mph) is once again enforced by a speed camera. Beyond Loddon it passes through the village of Hales at the junction of the B1136 for Great Yarmouth. Eventually reaching a roundabout where the A143 from Diss briefly joins it. A short downhill section brings us to a roundabout where the A143 splits off and continues on its way to Great Yarmouth. Also on this roundabout are some services - a BP garage and a McDonald's restaurant. The original route of the road used to take you through Gillingham, Beccles and Worlingham but the modern route misses all of this out, bypassing them to the north. Crossing the River Waveney we leave Norfolk and enter Suffolk and a little further on at a roundabout the A145 gives access to Beccles.

Beccles to Lowestoft

A short distance further on the road crosses over the East Suffolk Line at a level crossing and road leads past Beccles Common and Wild Carr woods on to another roundabout and another new stretch of road, the original road can be seen to the north, just through the trees. The speed limit from here has been reduced to 50 mph (80 km/h) for safety reasons. Recently the speed limit on the old stretch of road has also been reduced, this time to 30 mph (48 km/h) from its previous national speed limit, due to safety concerns as it was used as a 'rat run' to avoid congestion on the newer section of road. The road then passes North Cove and Barnby. Other points of interest are The Rookery Golf Club and the Carlton Crown Pub. There is another roadabout on entering Carlton Colville as the route turns slightly to the north past Oulton Broad South station and into Oulton Broad. Before re-crossing the River Waveney the road returns to its previous easterly direction. This final section follows the southern bank of the Waveney and passes some major new retail developments. The road ends at its junction with the A12 just south of Lowestoft's bascule bridge.

Transport links

The route of the A146 passes near to a number of railway stations.

Station Operator Destinations
Norwich National Express East Anglia Wherry Line, Great Eastern Main Line
Central Trains
Great Yarmouth, Lowestoft, Ipswich, Cambridge, Sheringham, London(Liverpool Street)
Liverpool, Birmingham
Beccles National Express East Anglia East Suffolk Line Lowestoft, Ipswich, London(Liverpool Street)
Oulton Broad South National Express East Anglia Wherry Line Ipswich, Lowestoft
Lowestoft National Express East Anglia Wherry Line, East Suffolk Line Norwich, Ipswich, London(Liverpool Street)

External links


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "A146 road" Read more