A308 road

A308 road shield

A308 road

The A308 at Hampton, beside the district's water works.
Route information
Length: 33.75 mi (54.32 km)
Major junctions
East end: Brompton
  A4 A4 road
A3220 A3220 road
A217 A217 road
A219 A219 road
A3 A3 road
A238 A238 road
A2043 A2043 road
A307 A307 road
A310 A310 road
A309 A309 road
A311 A311 road
A316 A316 road
[[Image:Motorway Left.svg|[ |x30px|link=]] M3 motorway
A244 A244 road
A30 A30 road
A3044 A3044 road
A320 A320 road
[[Image:Motorway Left.svg|[ |x30px|link=]] M25 motorway
A328 A328 road
A332 A332 road
A355 A355 road
A330 A330 road
[[Image:Motorway Left.svg|[ |x30px|link=]] M4 motorway
A4 A4 road
A404 A404 road
West end: Bisham
Location
Primary
destinations
:
Kingston upon Thames, Staines-upon-Thames, Maidenhead
Road network

The A308, is a road in England in two parts. The road has four principal axes to stay no more than 3 miles (4.8 km) from the River Thames to run from Central London upstream to Bisham, Berkshire which faces the town of Marlow across the river, explaining its four main orientations. The road is dualled each way in the section furthest from the River Thames, in north Surrey and forms one of the motorway spurs to the large town of Maidenhead.

London part

Kensington and Chelsea

The South Kensington to Fulham section starts at the A4 road opposite Brompton Oratory and follows Fulham Road south-west past Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, where it jumps south a block to takeover the Kings Road.

Hammersmith and Fulham

Through broad Fulham which traditionally, as bolstered by its associated London postcode, covers half of the borough,[1] the road becomes New Kings Road, before it ends at the A219 road (Fulham Palace Road), 100m north of Putney Bridge.

London, Surrey and Berkshire part

Kingston Upon Thames

Having skipped over the 2 miles (3.2 km) rise bisecting Putney and 2 miles of Putney Heath, which are the A219 road and A3, the road resumes. The long Kingston Vale to Bisham route starts at the Robin Hood Gate roundabout, the only give-way junction of the A3 south-west of Wandsworth and north-east of Greatham, Hampshire. The road is named Kingston Vale and Kingston Hill until it descends past Kingston Hospital, where it becomes London Road. Immediately after snaking through central Kingston upon Thames, the road crosses the River Thames at Kingston Bridge where it has another roundabout.

Richmond Upon Thames

The A308 in this borough is called Hampton Court Road, briefly Thames Street and then Upper Sunbury Road. It occupies a space carved out of the Royal Estate for it between Bushy Park and Hampton Court Park, and passes Hampton Court Palace including the roundabout opposite the Palace Gates, before continuing west through broad Hampton, passing its prominent parish church and waterworks to exit Greater London.

Surrey

The largely straight road from Hampton Court was surfaced and tolled in the 1780s by the Hampton and Staines Turnpike Trust.[2] In the west its buildings were set back with gardens and therefore it was widened in Spelthorne in the 1920s.[3]

As Staines Road East, the A308 winds past Kempton Park Racecourse, Sunbury-on-Thames and adopts instead of south-west followed after Kingston by west, the direction WNW, allowing it to meet Junction 1 of the M3/the A316 at the Sunbury Cross area also within Sunbury on Thames. On this line, it passes the Sunbury Common part of that town and the south side of the slightly larger town of Ashford, as Staines Road West and a dual carriageway, passing the Queen Mary Reservoir to form the by-pass to the large town of Staines-upon-Thames, after which it goes back to single carriageway to turn briefly south-west to take the high street roads network, rather than a straight continuation, which becomes the A30, then ends this street as Clarence Street, crosses the Thames (for a second time) at Staines Bridge, and resumes its main third-part orientation. It crosses the M25 motorway, that has a large cross-river junction at Junction 13, north of Egham.

The road turns north-west, as Windsor Road, in the middle of Runnymede's meadows, with its National Trust buildings and memorials, before leaving Surrey and entering Berkshire.

Berkshire

In Berkshire, the A308 forms the main road of the town of Old Windsor, where it is called Straight Road. It then goes on past the north end of Windsor Great Park, where it is called Albert Road, and through the west side of central Windsor. In Windsor, the A308 is called Osborne Road, Goslar Way and Maidenhead Road which finally re-adopts the normal third part-orientation of WNW. Finally, after sweeping round to its fourth major direction, NNW through Bray under the M4, where the road is called Windsor Road and Braywick Road, and wending through Maidenhead, passing its Victorian clock tower, the A308 continues under the names of Gringer Hill, Furze Platt Road and Marlow Road, before terminating at the A404 road in the sports-focussed civil parish of Bisham which has its riverside and Abbey ruins 200m north-west. Facing this on the river is the larger, equally well-preserved and green town of Marlow.

References

  1. Samuel Lewis (publisher) (1848). "Fulham". A Topographical Dictionary of England. Institute of Historical Research. Retrieved 21 October 2013.
  2. Samuel Lewis (editor) (1848). "Fulford – Fylingdales". A Topographical Dictionary of England. Institute of Historical Research. Retrieved 21 October 2013.
  3. Robbins, Michael (2003) [1953]. Middlesex. Chichester: Phillimore. p. 145. ISBN 9781860772696.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to A308 road (England).

Coordinates: 51°28′01″N 0°35′46″W / 51.46695°N 0.59601°W / 51.46695; -0.59601

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