A602 road

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A602 road
Direction Northwest -Southeast
Start Ware
Primary
destinations1
Stevenage
End Hitchin
Roads joined A1(M) motorway
A10 road
A119 road
A1072 road
A1155 road
A505 road
Notes
  1. Primary destinations as specified by the Department for Transport.

The A602 is a road linking Hitchin in Hertfordshire, England, with A10 at Ware in Hertfordshire, via Stevenage.

The Course of the road has changed significantly since the 1960s, with the construction of several bypasses and relief roads.

In Hitchin, the road starts at a junction with the A505, and follows a relief road round the south of the town centre, before re-joining the course of the original route for a mile.

The village of Little Wymondley is bypassed by a dual carriagway route to the A1 junction at Corey's Mill.

In Stevenage, the road takes two courses through the town - the first is a concurrency with the A1 round the new town to the junction at Langley Sidings. The second is a route through the town itself, following closely the route of the old Great North Road. The two routes converge and form a northern bypass for the suburb of Broadwater (the old Hertford Road through Broadwater has been closed to motor vehicles since the 1990s, to prevent rat-running).

The next 3km of road is the only remaining original piece of the route, travelling through the villages of Bragbury End and Hooks Cross. The next feature is a roundabout, and the road once again diverges from its original course and takes a left to bypass the village of Watton-at-Stone. At the eastern end of the Watton-at-Stone bypass (constructed in the late 1980s) it reaches another roundabout.

In the 1970s, the road continued from this point straight ahead down what is now the A119 to Hertford, and then travelled along the course of what is now the B1197 through Hertford Heath to Hoddesdon. With the opening of the A10 Hoddesdon and Ware bypass in the late 1970s, the A602 temporarily terminated at the A414 in Hertford. In 1987, with the opening of the Tonwell bypass, the road was completely re-routed along the course of the B1001 from Watton-at-Stone to meet the modern A10 at Ware. The B1001 itself remains for a short distance, linking the modern A10 with the old road in the town centre (now known as the A1170).

There are currently plans to modernise sections of the route between Ware and Watton-at-Stone to bring them up to a standard more suited to a primary route. The section between Sacome Pound and Watton-at-Stone is due to be upgraded first, with work commencing summer 2007.[1]

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