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A16 road (England)
Road in Lincolnshire, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The A16 road is a principal road of Lincolnshire in the East Midlands region of England, connecting the port of Grimsby and Peterborough, where it meets the A1175, A47 & A1139 then on to the A1 and the A605; the latter, in turn, giving a through route to Northampton and the west, and south west of England. Its length is 78 miles (126 km). The road was "de-trunked", with responsibility largely returned to Lincolnshire County Council from the Highways Agency in 2002.[2][3]
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Settlements on route
From north to south its route is:
- Grimsby
- Utterby
- Louth (now bypassed)
- Burwell
- Walmsgate
- Dalby
- Partney (now bypassed)
- Spilsby
- East Keal
- Keal Cotes
- Stickford (now bypassed)
- Stickney
- Sibsey
- Hilldyke
- Boston
- Wyberton (now bypassed)
- Kirton (now bypassed)
- Surfleet (now bypassed)
- Pinchbeck (now bypassed)
- Spalding (now bypassed)
- Crowland (bypassed)
- Peterborough
The road is a Primary Route for its entire length. Most of the A16 is single carriageway.
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History
Ludborough Bypass opening
The 1-mile (1.6 km) £1.2 million Ludborough Bypass opened on 25 October 1992.[4]
Fotherby Bypass opening
The 1-mile (1.6 km) Fotherby Bypass opened in 2004. [citation needed]
Louth Bypass opening
3-mile (4.8 km) £6.6 million Louth Bypass opened in August 1991.[5]
Partney Bypass opening
The 1-mile (1.6 km) Partney Bypass opened in August 2005. [citation needed]
Stickford Bypass opening
The 1-mile (1.6 km) £1 million Stickford Bypass opened in October 1992. [citation needed]
Boston Inner Relief Road opening
The £1.4 million Boston Inner Relief Road opened in early 1978.[citation needed]
Boston-Algarkirk Diversion opening
The 6-mile (9.7 km) £11.5 million Boston-Algarkirk Diversion opened in October 1991. [citation needed]
Spalding Bypass opening
The 11-mile (18 km) £23 million Spalding-Sutterton Improvement (the Spalding Bypass) opened in August 1995.[6]
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Junction list
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Future
Boston Distributor Road
There are demands for Boston to be bypassed. Therefore, Lincolnshire County Council have 'safeguarded' the corridor for the Boston Distributor Road. [7]
Incidents
There are multiple crashes on the A16, especially near Louth and Crowland. [8]
Spalding-Peterborough route change
Summarize
Perspective
Old route of the A16
The route of the A16 changed following the completion of the new Spalding-Peterborough link road. The section between Spalding to the south of Crowland only, opened in August 2010; the remainder was completed in October 2011. The new route has taken the number A16, effectively linking the route with Peterborough, with the current road from Spalding to Stamford becoming the A1175.[9]
A1073 road
This new section replaced the A1073 road, a road that ran between the former A16 at 52°45.5262′N 0°9.6174′W 0.81 miles (1.3 km) south of Spalding in Lincolnshire and the A47 between Eye and Eye Green at 52°36.7206′N 0°11.1378′W near Peterborough. [10][11][12]
The A1073 route had become increasingly dangerous over the years because traffic usage had increased. It was narrow with many blind corners and slopes, and much of it was on an embankment with deep ditches either side and no run-off areas. There were dangerous junctions, particularly with the B1443 between Peakirk and Thorney, which formed a staggered crossroads. The road was a principal route servicing the food-processing industry in Spalding, bringing in supplies and moving products to the supermarket distribution system to the south.
An upgrade to the route had been under discussion for many years. The main hold-up was arguments over funding between the administrative counties of Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire and the Department for Transport, exacerbated by the actions of a former Leader of Lincolnshire County Council who went to jail for seeking to influence the route to his own financial advantage.[13] Eventually a route was agreed, avoiding Cowbit and Crowland and joining the A47 west of Eye, and in 2008 construction work began, originally due to be completed by Autumn 2010.[14][15]
The Northern 8.3 miles (13.4 km) of the new route opened between Spalding and the roundabout south of Crowland in Autumn 2010, with the opening of the Southern 4.8 miles (7.7 km) delayed due to structural problems at the embankment at Car Dyke Bridge. On completion of remedial repairs and the opening of the Southern portion on 16 October 2011, the new road was renumbered to form part of the A16; the original A1073 alignment between Spalding and Eye Green became an unclassified local road.[16]
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References
External links
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