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The A127 looking Eastbound (Southend-bound) The A127, also known as the Southend Arterial Road, is a major road in Essex, England. It was constructed as a new arterial road project in the 1920s, linking Romford with Southend-on-Sea, replacing the older A13. Formerly classified as a trunk road, it was "de-trunked" in 1997. [1]
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Traffic camera; Giditraffic is an online social service which employs crowd sourcing as its primary means of providing real-time traffic updates to subscribers. The service is delivered free of charge. RoadPal [2] uses crowd-sourced data from mobile users as well as the social media to provide users with traffic information of places of ...
Continuing north, the road is named Tilbury Road as it meets the A127 at the Halfway House junction near West Horndon. As the road continues in a northbound direction, motorists pass through the villages of Herongate and Ingrave (where the A128 becomes known as Ingrave Road) before a junction at the eastern end of Brentwood High Street.
At the roundabout, an extemporised two-lane flyover still provides priority for A12 eastbound to A127 traffic (and vice versa). However, the A12 now veers roughly north-eastward, because it starts to follow the course of the Roman road; the Romans started building this road from Colchester, their original capital for the province.
The tunnels will each have 3 lanes for traffic. [51] [52] There would be three junctions: Orsett on the A13, Thong on the A2 and north-bound slip roads on the M25 at junction 29. Junctions have been removed on the A226 south of Chalk and on the A128 at Chadwell St Mary in Essex. [53]
Bookmark this page as we update conditions and check in for the latest. 4:30 p.m.: Traffic to Sagamore Bridge lightens up Around 4:30 p.m., traffic on Route 6 westbound approaching the Sagamore ...
The A13 is a major road in England linking Central London with east London and south Essex.Its route is similar to that of the London, Tilbury and Southend line via Rainham, Grays, Tilbury, Stanford-Le-Hope & Pitsea, and runs the entire length of the northern Thames Gateway area, terminating on the Thames Estuary at Shoeburyness.