Bristol and Bath Railway Path
The Bristol and Bath Railway Path is a 15-mile (24 km) off-road
It was built by the cycling charity Sustrans between 1979 and 1986, which leased a five-mile (8.0 km) stretch near Saltford, with the help of the then Avon County Council, and using volunteers turned it into its first cycleway.
Route
The path follows the route of the
Bristol end
The path starts at Trinity Street, Lawrence Hill. 51°27′22″N 2°34′30″W / 51.456104°N 2.575019°W
Clay Bottom
A housing development at Clay Bottom (near the B4469) has encroached onto the alignment of the railway, and the cycleway diverts around several houses causing a blind corner. These houses would be in the way of any future use of this section as a guided busway or rail use.
Staple Hill
3.2 miles from the Bristol end, the path reaches Staple Hill station. On the remaining platform there is a modern sculptured seat. The path rises up level with the platform, and then drops back down to the track bed.
A short distance from the station is the entrance to the 0.3-mile-long Staple Hill Tunnel under
Mangotsfield station
The disused Bristol and Gloucester route to Yate now provides a spur from the railway path northwest to the Bristol ring road cycle path and Emersons Green.
The remaining island platforms have railway-related sculptures between them, some depicting waiting passengers. One notable sculpture was that of a suitcase,[2] supposedly belonging to one of the passengers. However, it disappeared in the summer of 2008.[3]
Avon ring road
From 1999 to July 2001 South Gloucestershire Council built a new section of the A4174 Avon ring road along part of the path. While the work was being undertaken the path was diverted away from the old railway line and a new section was added around the ring road, increasing the length by 200 yards. The new section includes two bridges, several tight corners, a hill (South Gloucestershire Council describes it as a 'barely perceptible gradient'), and two cattle grids.
Warmley station
The station platform at Warmley contains a cafe, serving refreshments seven days a week year-round, and includes public toilets.[4]
Avon Valley Railway
Between
The railway's cafe at Bitton railway station is open all year round.
Bath end
The end of the path is at the Brassmill Lane trading estate in Bath. 51°23′08″N 2°24′02″W / 51.385498°N 2.400456°W The west Bath riverside path continues to the city centre.
Sculpture
As of 2007 there were 26 commissioned artworks along the Path.[5]
Picture | Location | Title | Artist | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
St Phillips Road, Bristol | Twisted Archway | Cod Steaks | [6] | |
Lawrence Hill | Dancing Drum | Steve Joyce | [7] | |
Fishponds | Fish on its nose | Doug Cocker | ||
Mangotsfield | Sentinel I&II | Jim Paulsen | ||
Warmley Station | Waiting | Steve Joyce | [8] | |
Near Warmley | Gaius Sentius | Gordon Young |
Guided busway proposal
In January 2008, a plan was revealed by the
A petition against this proposal on Bristol City Council's website gained over 7900 signatures within the first month.[10] A website was set up by a group opposed to the plans.[11] In a council meeting on 1 April, plans for the busway were put on hold, but the council refused to rule out using the path for a busway later.[12]
Rapid transit proposal
It is suggested that the eastern route of a proposed Bristol rapid transit system could run as a light rail track alongside the Bristol and Bath Railway Path, which would not have to close.[13]
References
- ^ a b "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 January 2009. Retrieved 27 January 2008.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "In Pictures - Railway path: Mangotsfield".
- Blogspot.
- ^ Map – Warmley
- ^ "Public Art Online - Public Art South West - Public art in the SW - Examples of Public Art in the South West: Sustrans".
- ^ "Cod Steaks". codsteaks.com. Archived from the original on 12 April 2016.
- ^ "Steve Joyce - Cyclepath fountain".
- ^ "Steve Joyce - Waiting".
- ^ "Bus lane scheme hits the buffers". BBC. 29 March 2008. Retrieved 13 November 2018.
- ^ "Bristol Petitioning". Archived from the original on 3 April 2008. Retrieved 27 January 2008.
- ^ Save the Railway Path | The campaign to save the Bristol to Bath cycle path from being turned into a bus-lane
- ^ "Cities' rapid bus scheme shelved". BBC News. 2 April 2008. Retrieved 2 April 2008.
- ^ "City could get tram next to Bristol to Bath cycle path instead of underground". 2 February 2018.
External links
- Bristol & Bath Railway Path official website
- Sustrans, 2002. The Official Guide to the National Cycle Network. 2nd ed. Italy: Canile & Turin. ISBN 1-901389-35-9. Relevant section reproduced here