Can anyone suggest a suitable alternative route from Worthing to Winchester (& back), avoiding Arundel please?
Take a look at the A24 - A272?
Can anyone suggest a suitable alternative route from Worthing to Winchester (& back), avoiding Arundel please?
Head east to Littlehampton follow the bypass then north up the A284 to Crossbush and rejoin the A27.
The A27 through Arundel has been a nightmare for years. There is probably a very simple answer, but does anyone know why this has still to be resolved? It seems obvious from the satellite view on google earth where the road was meant to go - there is even a bit of road built pointing in the correct direction, yet it still bottlenecks round by Arundel train station.
It seems to me that they have built a temporary fix at Crossbush, which is still there nearly 20 years later.
Kind of knew most of that loosely, but interesting to see the more technical explanation. Just one thing... Alistair Darling? 1993? Got me a bit confuzzled on that one.
Sod this for the next 7 weeks...they resurfaced the station approach road in Arundel overnight, so why not give the same treatment to Crossbush?
how was it tuesday morning ??
When the Crossbush bypass was built in the early 1990's there were various alternative routes for the planned Arundel bypass, crossing the river at differing points and going through or round Binsted Woods in different ways but they all had the eastern section at Crossbush in common, so the County Council successfully lobbied the Department for Transport to do the Crossbush bit first to get the traffic out of the village whilst the rest got sorted out. As you say, a temporary fix. Following that, the junction and dual carriageway at Patching was built. Eventually a preferred route for Arundel was chosen, known as the "Pink/Blue Route" and that was slated to be built after a large Worthing+Lancing scheme, featuring two tunnels, which had been through a year long public enquiry in the mid 1990's, was completed. Nationally, road building had been at a high level since the Tories "Roads for Prosperity" white paper in 1989, although precious little investment was put into most other forms of transport.
In 1996 the roads budget was slashed to raise money for pre-election tax cuts whilst at the same time being seen to respond to environmental criticism / protests over controversial road projects such as Twyford Down and Newbury amongst others. So the various schemes for the south coast (also including Chichester, Lewes-Polegate and Bexhill/Hastings) went back into the melting pot.
The incoming New Labour Government also wanted to be seen to be environmentally friendly and to be financially prudent, sticking to announced Tory spending limits for their first parliamentary term. Accordingly a wizard wheeze was invented - straight out of "Yes Minister" - to avoid spending any money on road improvements or on railways or any other form of major transport investment and avoid making controversial decisions about transport schemes by announcing a series of large scale "Multi-Modal Studies" for all the major transport corridors which were competing for investment funds. These studies would give us all the answers about the future of the transport system.
So lots of firms of consultants were commissioned to spend a few years pouring over facts and figures and running computer simulations and calculating costs and benefits, even for schemes which had already been examined in great detail, but by "old" criteria. One of these was the the South Coast Multi Modal Study (SoCoMMS).
In summer 2002 the Multi Modal Studies reported. The SoCoMMS recommended going ahead with both the Worthing + Lancing and the Arundel Bypasses, plus Bexhill/Hastings link road and putting flyovers on Chichester Bypass. It also recommended double tracking of the Hastings to Ashford railway line and other rail improvements to permit a half hourly express train service between Southampton, Brighton and Ashford. Also a light rapid transit system for Brighton and Hove. The Government thought about all this - and the investment recommendations of the other studies - for a year to a backdrop of some very expensive military adventures in the Middle East, then in July 1993 Alistair Darling got up in front of the House of Commons and announced the following:
"We have to bear in mind our central objective is to enable people to travel in a way that is consistent with our environmental and social objectives. There are therefore some recommendations in these [multi-modal] studies that I cannot accept. As I have said before, unless there is an overriding public interest in a scheme, there should be a strong presumption against building roads through areas of outstanding natural beauty or other sensitive sites. We have a clear duty to do everything that we can to preserve the environment...[a lot of stuff about rejecting proposals in the West Midlands snipped]... Similarly, on the south coast, the Arundel bypass would cut across water meadows damaging an area of outstanding beauty. I am rejecting that proposal, as well as proposals to expand junctions with flyovers on the Chichester bypass and the proposal for a tunnel at Worthing. Each, in my view, has environmental consequences that are unacceptable and avoidable.’
Very little has been heard from the Department for Transport about Arundel or Worthing and Lancing ever since.