A240 road
A240 road | |
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Route information | |
Length: | 8.5 mi (13.7 km) |
Major junctions | |
South East end: | Burgh Heath, Surrey Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
A217 road A24 road A2022 road A232 road A3210 road A3 road A307 road |
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North West end: | Kingston upon Thames, Greater London Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Road network | |
The A240 is a partially primary status A road in Surrey and Greater London that connects the A217 with the A3 and continues beyond through Surbiton to Kingston upon Thames. The road is 8.5 miles (13.7 km) long[1] and is dualled as the Ewell bypass and thereafter to Tolworth Broadway. In conjunction with the A3 it provides an alternative to the congested A24 corridor through Morden and Merton.
Contents
Route
The A240 runs through three boroughs. Starting in Burgh Heath (Reigate and Banstead); most of its course is a direct route skirting Ewell (Epsom and Ewell) and its finishing section through Tolworth, Surbiton and the south of Kingston in the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames the A240's Greater London borough.
Reigate and Banstead
Branching off the A217 on at Burgh Heath, at the north of a plateau of the North Downs at 178m OD,[2] the road descends northwest passing the large village of Great Burgh or Epsom Downs as a single carriageway primary road, through traffic-lit crossroad junctions with the suburban B2221.[n 1].
The B2221[n 2] branches off and after there is a crossroads for Yew Tree Bottom Road[n 3]; it crosses the Sutton and Mole Valley Epsom Downs branch line immediately before exiting the borough.
Epsom and Ewell
The road enters the Borough of Epsom and Ewell just before A2022 heads west into Epsom at a roundabout. After, the A240 continues on its descent through a short stretch of tree-lined open space including the grounds of NESCOT, the route resumes its tree-lined suburban street verges in the highest outskirts of Ewell.
At the bottom of this incline the elevation reaches 45m OD[2] and the A24 joins from the southwest. After meeting the A24 the gradient slows it runs concurrently with the A24 road as the Ewell Bypass and becomes a dual carriageway. The bypass shortly afterwards meets the B2200 (traversing Ewell town centre) at the crossroads with the start of the A232. At the next crossroads, the A24 heads off north-east, when meeting the B2200 again, whilst the bypass continues, as the A240 north-west and is the boundary between Ewell and Stoneleigh.
It becomes Kingston Road at the Beggars Hill Roundabout with Park Avenue West heading east into Stoneleigh. The road then goes under the railway line near Stoneleigh railway station with the Ewell Court neighbourhood to the west. The road then passes Stoneleigh Park Road traffic lights, for the railway station, or Bradford Drive, and Thorndon Gardens traffic lights. See traffic mentioned below.
The road bisects a northern spur of West Ewell where it meets the B284, again, at Ruxley Lane. The B284 then branches off at the next junction on Worcester Park Road just before non-humped Tolworth Court Bridge over the Hogsmill stream.
Greater London
The A240 then enters the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames in Greater London as it goes over the Hogsmill River, a tributary of the River Thames at Tolworth Court Bridge. It then goes under another railway bridge by Tolworth railway station before crossing the A3 at the Tolworth Junction, a grade separated roundabout, which the A3 takes uninterrupted. In rush hour, traffic jams from Tolworth junction can stretch to the junction with Thorndon Gardens.
Now as a non-primary road and a single carriageway road again, the A240 continues north-west as commercial Tolworth Broadway passing a well-known landmark, Tolworth Tower, before becoming longer Ewell Road which gently ascends from 24 to 32m where it crosses the South Western Main Line northeast of Surbiton railway station. The road turns north-by-northwest with the tangent before this bend being a short link road (A3210) the first of three straight roads to central Surbiton.
In north Surbiton it winds downhill quickly between has two junctions with roads that form the B3363 to central Surbiton. From then on it heads straight towards the B3365 , the link road to the A307 where the road bends to the north. It passes County Hall and Kingston University (Penrhyn Road) as the road approaches its end at a roundabout by Kingston College and the Hogsmill River in Kingston town centre.
Bus lanes are incorporated in the Greater London section between the junction with the A3 and its terminus at Kingston.
Notes and references
- Notes
- Citations
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Grid Reference Finder.com Elevation Tools