A37 road

The A37 is a major road in south west England. It runs north from the A35 at Dorchester in Dorset into Somerset through Yeovil and Shepton Mallet before terminating at the Three Lamps junction with the A4 in central Bristol. The road is entirely single carriageway, except in the Yeovil and Bristol built-up areas, at Ilchester (where it multiplexes with the A303), and north of Dorchester.

A37
The A37 north of Pensford
Route information
Length60.2 mi (96.9 km)
Major junctions
South endDorchester 50.712°N 2.473°W / 50.712; -2.473
  A35

A352
A356
A3088
A30
A359
A303
A372
A371
A361
A367
A39
A362
A368
A4174

A4
North endBristol 51.444°N 2.578°W / 51.444; -2.578
Location
Primary
destinations
Bristol
Yeovil
Dorchester
Road network

The road today

The road is subject to a stream of speed restrictions where it winds through a number of small villages. These parts of the road can be dangerous, especially where wide vehicles pass on sections where buildings are close to the road.

History

The original A37 in 1922 started in Weymouth, however, the section to Dorchester was soon renumbered A354, presumably to create a link between the major port of Weymouth and the A30 at Salisbury, from where the route would continue to London. Such a route has now been superseded by the M27 and M3.

From the Podimore roundabout northeast of Ilchester to Shepton Mallet the route traces that of the Fosse Way.

One of the worst accident spots on the A37 was the A371 junction just south of Shepton Mallet. The junction was always very busy and suffered long traffic queues due to the nature of the road. The junction was also a point where traffic would converge or pass through from multiple locations, this was further exacerbated by the A361 Glastonbury junction which backed right onto the first junction. This muddled configuration resulted in numerous road traffic accidents, many of which were fatal.

After a long campaign for the junction to be replaced, a roundabout was constructed in 1999 significantly improving road safety and traffic flow. There have been few other construction schemes on the road in recent decades.

In recent years most of the overtaking lanes, provided on steep stretches just south of Bristol, have been blocked out with chevrons.

A potential extension of the Avon Ring Road A4714 from the Hicks Gate Roundabout between Keynsham and Bristol to the A37 south of Whitchurch would provide a direct link to the M32 and M4 north of Bristol. [1]

gollark: Possibly? I'd expect there's another way.
gollark: EFI, I mean.
gollark: I'm not sure if it actually has drawing commands outside of terminal-ish stuff.
gollark: Or probably `periodictable[elem]`, I doubt they would do it that weirdly.
gollark: Just use getattr or something.

References

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