Hogarth Roundabout

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Hogarth Roundabout looking north from the A316

The Hogarth Roundabout sees the merger of two of the nine direct feeders to the main radial roads to or from London. Namely the A316 Great Chertsey Road and the A4 Great West Road in Chiswick.[a] In addition Dorchester Grove, becoming Chiswick Lane, branches off to the north and Church Lane to the conserved, affluent, Old Chiswick nucleus to the south. It contains trees and is much-lined with greenery yet is at surface level, save for a one-way flyover for much of the lighter eastbound traffic.

Roundabout[]

The site in about 1880.[1] Click for broader map and to enable varied magnification. The roads leading east, southwest and west: much expanded since. The dots represent trees.

The roundabout is named after the eighteenth-century painter William Hogarth whose home is behind a long, high wall west of the junction: Hogarth's House. The eastern approach abuts the Griffin Brewery of Fuller, Smith and Turner where beer has been brewed since 1654. The south side has the George and Devonshire pub (built in 1790), other listed buildings. The north side has a modern, electric/hybrid car showroom and offices.

Hogarth Roundabout looking east and south

The junction is of great importance to road transport, notably for the only non-circuitous routes to Heathrow Airport from the City and the West End. On 29 October 2013, after the previous day's stormy winds, Transport for London inspectors discovered 'defects' and closed the flyover, declaring it "unsafe". Garrett Emmerson stated its engineers identified a degradation in the concrete deck of the flyover. Traffic thus concentrated with queues in day-time back to the Hammersmith flyover and many more miles, at morning peak, to the west.[2]

Flyover[]

The junction is noteworthy for the single-lane flyover to ease some eastbound traffic from the A316 onto the A4. It was built as a temporary measure in 1971, using the Bridgway format devised and offered to highway authorities by Marples Ridgeway Ltd.[3]

It was quickly put together with a cheap steel frame and was designed to last no more than a few years. The central span has pairs of diagonal cross-braces to give the structure strength and help protect it against strong winds. The junction would have been in the plans for London Ringways – shelved in the latter years of the 20th century.[4] These would have a more durable structure put in place. In the early 2010s a major refurbishment: a new deck, surface and parapets has ensured its survival and confirmed its stature as a permanent fixture.[5]

References[]

Citations[]

  1. ^ Map of Middlesex sheet 21, Ordnance Survey, 1868-1883
  2. ^ "Flyover Closed At Hogarth Roundabout". Chiswick W4. 29 October 2013. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  3. ^ "News and Views: Instant flyover". Autocar. 128 (3759): 57. 29 February 1968.
  4. ^ "Ringways". CBRD. Archived from the original on 20 August 2016. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  5. ^ "Hogarth Flyover". Retrieved 9 November 2015.

Footnotes[]

  1. ^ The others are the A2, A20, A23, A3, A47 (for M1), A1, and A12 (for M11)

External links[]

Coordinates: 51°29′13″N 0°15′09″W / 51.48694°N 0.25250°W / 51.48694; -0.25250

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