Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

A3 road

 
Wikipedia: A3 road
UK road A3.svg
A3 road
Direction North east- South west
Start City of London
Primary
destinations1
Kingston upon Thames
Guildford
Petersfield
End Portsmouth Harbour
Roads joined [ M⁠25 ⁠] M25 motorway
[ A⁠3 (M) ⁠] A3(M) motorway
[ M⁠27 ⁠] M27 motorway
[ M⁠275 ⁠] M275 motorway
UK road A2.svg A2 road
UK road A24.svg A24 road
UK road A27.svg A27 road
UK road A202.svg A202 road
UK road A205.PNG A205 road
UK road A240.PNG A240 road
UK road A272.PNG A272 road
UK road A31.svg A31 road
UK road A309.PNG A309 road
UK road A320.PNG A320 road
UK road A322.PNG A322 road
UK road A219.PNG A219 road
UK road A3100.PNG A3100 road
Notes
  1. Primary destinations as specified by the Department for Transport.

The A3, known as the Portsmouth Road for much of its length, is a dual/divided highway, or expressway, which follows the historic 10route between London and Portsmouth passing close to Kingston upon Thames, Guildford, Haslemere and Petersfield. For much of its 108-kilometre (67-mile) length, it is classified as a trunk road and, apart from a section within the London conurbation and short section where the Hindhead Tunnel is currently being built, is dual carriageway. At its southerly end, the original road has been replaced by the A3(M), but the designation A3 is still used to identify the old road.

The A3 near Liphook
The A3(M) at the Portsdown Hill Road Bridge nearing Junction 5 with the A27.
Northbound near the Wisley Interchange with the M25.

Contents

History

The historic Portsmouth Road once had great strategic significance as the major link between the capital city and one of its major sea ports. Many of the towns and villages that it passed through gained income and prestige as a result — such as Kingston upon Thames, Esher, Guildford, Godalming, Haslemere and Petersfield. The modern A3 follows the general route of the Portsmouth Road, but bypasses many of the towns and villages along the way, leaving the various stretches of the old Portsmouth Road for local traffic — for instance, the A307 through Esher, also known as the Portsmouth Road. For some of its length, the road follows a similar line to the Portsmouth Direct Line railway, although one of the major exceptions is that the A3 does not go through or closely bypass Havant.

However, a programme of road improvements starting in the 1920s transformed the road so that is now predominantly a two or three lane dual carriageway, bypassing the town centres, with a section of motorway, the A3(M), just before the road reaches the A27 at Havant. The construction of the Kingston and Guildford bypasses in the 1920s and 1930s made use of temporary narrow gauge railways to move the construction materials. The stretch of road between Guildford and Hook is three lanes with a good hard shoulder, and thus almost motorway standard.

The road was once the haunt of highwaymen. For example, the legendary Jerry Abershawe terrorised the area around Kingston and led a gang based at the Bald Faced Stag Inn on the Portsmouth Road. Another particularly dangerous location was in the vicinity of the Devil's Punch Bowl, Hindhead, about 8 miles (13 km) south-west of Guildford.

Future improvements

Today Hindhead is an area better known for hold-ups of a very different kind: traffic jams. This is because it remains one of the very few stretches of single carriageway on the A3, and is heavily used by commuters. It is estimated that on average this stretch of road carries 28,400 vehicles per day, resulting in long queues building up here, particularly during the morning peak hours. A 1.2 mile (1.8 km) twin bore tunnel bypassing the Devil's Punch Bowl (a Site of Special Scientific Interest) is being built. The tunnel was started from both the north and south approaches, with the linking of the two taking place in February 2009 [1]

Once complete (target date 2011) the £371 million Hindhead Tunnel will be the longest non-estuarial road tunnel in the UK, and will convert the last remaining single carriageway section of the A3, outside of London and Portsmouth, to dual carriageway.The project is progressing well, and the tunnel bores have already been completed.[2][3][4]

London

The A3 starts at King William Street at its junction with Gracechurch Street in the City of London, crosses London Bridge, and goes south-west along Borough High Street and Newington Causeway to the Elephant and Castle roundabout. It continues along Newington Butts, Kennington Park Road, Clapham Road and Clapham High Street. The road then passes the north side of Clapham Common and carries on through Wandsworth to Putney Heath and then between Richmond Park and Wimbledon Common. It bypasses Kingston upon Thames in SW London, where it is known as the Kingston By-pass.

The Kingston By-pass had been proposed in 1912 but with the advent of World War I plans were shelved. By the early 1920s, traffic in Kingston town centre had increased by over 160% in 10 years and the decision was taken to revive the plans. Work finally started in 1924 on what was to become one of the first arterial roads in Britain. It was opened by the Prime Minister, the Rt Hon Stanley Baldwin MP, on 28 October 1927. It ran for 8.5 miles or 14 km from the Robin Hood Gate of Richmond Park to the outskirts of Esher. The opening ceremony concluded with refreshments for 800 guests in marquees near what is now the Merton fly-over. The Merton flyover takes the Merton Spur one mile, finishing close to Wimbledon Chase railway station.

The construction of the Kingston By-pass immediately attracted developers wishing to build houses where access was already provided. The 1935 Ribbon Development Act came too late to prevent this building, which is especially notable where the A3 winds through Tolworth and New Malden.

Today there is a traffic black spot during peak hours going northbound before the Hook underpass. The road reduces from three lanes to two in the underpass. The speed limit at this point reduces from 70 mph to 50 mph. The traffic from the A309 also joins just before the underpass. This section is often busy from about 7:50am to 8:30am and from 5:15pm to 5:50pm.

Surrey and Hampshire

The Kingston By-pass becomes the Esher By-pass at the A3's junction with the A309.

The road then intersects with the M25 and runs through Guildford as a dual carriageway standard before bypassing Godalming. It reduces to a single carriageway at Hindhead where it climbs to about 260 metres or 870 feet over a ridge. It continues past Liphook and Petersfield and climbs over the South Downs and down towards Horndean.

Portsmouth

From just north of Horndean southwards the A3 separates from the A3(M) (below) and continues as London Road as far as Hilsea, south of which it is Northern Parade (London Road continues as the A2047). It runs along the west side of Portsea Island, roughly parallel with the M275, into the centre of the town where, after passing the Catholic cathedral, it meets with the A3020. It then continues through Old Portsmouth passing the Anglican cathedral and the old 15th century harbour where it comes to an end.

A3(M)

A3(M) motorway
UK motorway A3(M).svg

Road of the United Kingdom

Length 5 miles (8 km)
Direction North - South
Start Horndean
Primary destinations Portsmouth
End Bedhampton
Construction dates 1979 - entire motorway
Motorways joined none
The junction between the A3(M) and the A27.

This section of the road was opened in 1979[5] and acts as a bypass of the A3 road in this part of Hampshire.

Junctions

A3(M) Motorway
Northbound exits Junction Southbound exits
Road continues as A3 towards Petersfield J1 Horndean A3
No exit Start of motorway
Horndean, Lovedean B2149 J2 Havant, Lovedean B2149
Waterlooville, Denmead B2150 J3 Waterlooville, Havant B2150
Widley, Havant J4 No exit
Drayton, Cosham A2030
Bedhampton B2177
J5 Hastings, Brighton, Chichester A27
Drayton, Cosham A2030
Bedhampton B2177
Start of motorway Terminus Portsmouth A27 (M27, M275)

Cycle paths

There are several shared pedestrian and cycle paths on the A3, although many are infrequently used. One cycle path links the village of Liss with the town of Petersfield on the Portsmouth-bound side of the A3 Petersfield bypass. Another links the village of Greatham with West Liss. The path is on the London-bound side, linking to a bridge over the A3 to West Liss. This means cyclists and pedestrians are not required to cross the dual carriageway on foot at the Ham Barn roundabout. There is another path on the Portsmouth-bound A3 between Longmoor Rd (near Greatham) and Liphook via Griggs Green.

There is also a cycle path between Greatham and Liphook, and nearer Portsmouth there is a cycle path between Clanfield and the Queen Elizabeth Country Park, a large forest near Petersfield next to the A3. There is, however, no cycle path between Petersfield and the Queen Elizabeth Country Park.

Between Thursley and Milford (near Guildford), cycle crossings of the slip roads have been constructed on both sides of the carriageway for the few cyclists travelling on this dual carriageway.

See also

References

External links



Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 
Learn More
List of A3 roads
A3 road (Malaysia)
A3 road (Isle of Man)

What are the dimensions of A3 paper? Read answer...
Were is fuse box on audi a3? Read answer...
Audi a3 0-60? Read answer...

Help us answer these
Can you get high from mylan A3?
Diagram for audi a3 radio?
What is the length of a3 paper?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "A3 road" Read more