A370 road

The A370 is a primary road in England running from Bath Road, near Temple Meads railway station in the city of Bristol to Weston-super-Mare before continuing to the village of East Brent in Somerset. A more direct route from Bristol to East Brent is the A38.

A370
The A370 Leaving Weston-super-Mare.
Major junctions
FromBristol
  M5
A4
A369
A371
A3069
A38
ToEast Brent
Road network

Route

Within Bristol urban area, the road begins at Bath Road roundabout, at the busy junction with A4 near Temple Meads. It then follows the new cut of River Avon west to Cumberland basin, via Bedminster.

From here on, it begins to head south-westwards out of the City. It first bypasses Long Ashton, then passes through Flax Bourton, Backwell, Brockley, Cleeve, Congresbury and Hewish, beyond which it crosses the M5 motorway at Junction 21.

The road then enters Weston-super-Mare: a dual carriageway extends most of the way, by passing the built-up area, including Junction 21 Enterprise Area to the east of the town. On reaching the waterfront, the road turns south to run partly along the beach, then leaves Weston at Uphill. It passes Bleadon and Lympsham before meeting the A38 road at East Brent.[1]

Condition

The A370 can get extremely busy during rush hour.[2] Congestion points include the approaches to the M5 motorway, the traffic lights in Congresbury and the Long Ashton bypasswhich now has a high-occupancy vehicle lane solely for use by buses, taxis, motorcycles, and cars with two or more occupants.

Future

As part of the "Greater Bristol Strategic Transport Study", a link road is under consideration to the south of Bristol.[3][4] This is in part due to the congestion at Winterstoke Road and Barrow Gurney,[5] both of which are very busy, especially the latter where the road can only accommodate travelling at one direction at a given time); and the incomplete Bristol Ring Road (A4174).

By 2017, A370 Long Ashton By Pass will be connected to the South Bristol Link (SBL) road, currently under construction as part of the MetroBus rapid transit scheme, providing a new road linking Hengrove to Long Ashton By Pass and the Long Ashton Park & Ride.[6]

Points of interest

Point Coordinates
(Links to map resources)
OS Grid Ref Notes

a

Bristol 51.4473°N 2.5822°W / 51.4473; -2.5822 (Bristol) ST596721 Bristol
M5 junction 21 51.3588°N 2.8935°W / 51.3588; -2.8935 (M5 junction 21) ST378625 Intersection with M5 motorway
East Brent 51.2578°N 2.9332°W / 51.2578; -2.9332 (East Brent) ST349513 East Brent, Somerset
gollark: I don't think systemd offers particularly complex controls for autorestart.
gollark: The solution is to make my server reboot slower, clearly.
gollark: Basically, it turned out that when the power cut out a few days ago, my interweb router *and* server rebooted, my server came up faster than the terrible BT interwebbernet router, and <@!509849474647064576> started, crashed because there was no internet connection, autorestarted, then gave up because the interweb was still gone.
gollark: <@!509849474647064576> service has been restored.
gollark: "The" scheme?

References

  1. "A370: Bristol - East Brent". SABRE. Retrieved 3 April 2009.
  2. Harding, Julie (15 December 2008). "Cyclist killed in Bristol road accident". This is Bristol. Archived from the original on 7 May 2009. Retrieved 3 April 2009.
  3. "Greater Bristol Transport Strategy" (PDF). Atkins. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 March 2012. Retrieved 12 December 2010.
  4. "South Bristol Link – A370 Junction" (PDF). North Somerset Council. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 March 2012. Retrieved 12 December 2010.
  5. "Village calls on North Somerset to clear drains to avoid road disaster". Evening Post. Archived from the original on 17 September 2012. Retrieved 12 December 2010.
  6. "South Bristol Link". Travelwest. Retrieved 22 April 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.