A200 road

Summary

51°30′22″N 0°05′18″W / 51.5060°N 0.0882°W / 51.5060; -0.0882

A200 shield
A200
Route information
Length4.1 mi (6.6 km)
Major junctions
West endLondon Bridge
Major intersections A3
A2205
A100
A101
A2208
A2209
A206
East endGreenwich
Location
CountryUnited Kingdom
Constituent countryEngland
Road network
The western end of the A200 can be seen on the left of this photo, running between the river and the railway line
Former South Eastern Railway offices on Tooley St
Surrey Quays railway station on Lower Road

The A200 is an A road in London running from London Bridge to Greenwich.

Cycleway 4 will follow most of the A200 road.

Route edit

Tooley Street edit

The name derives from St Olave's Street, after the Church of St Olave.[1] For much of its history the street has been lined with warehouses, and in 1861 Scovell's warehouse caught fire, resulting in the largest peacetime fire in the Port of London.[2]

Jamaica Road edit

Tooley Street becomes Jamaica Road at Shad Thames. A little over halfway down (from the Tower Bridge end) lies Bermondsey Underground station, which is served by the Jubilee line. A thoroughfare of shops follows, and the road continues on until Culling Circus roundabout, where it turns roughly 90 degrees south towards Deptford and becomes Lower Road. Brunel Road and the Rotherhithe Tunnel also meet at this junction. King's Stairs Gardens and Southwark Park lie at the south-eastern end.

Lower Road edit

Lower Road runs for roughly 1 mile (1.6 km), past Surrey Quays shopping centre until it reaches Deptford, where it becomes Evelyn Street. Southwark Park runs the length of Lower Road, to the west.

Evelyn Street edit

Named after diarist John Evelyn, the street runs from the Plough Way junction south to the junction with Deptford Church Street. There is both a McDonald's and a KFC along this stretch.

Creek Road edit

Creek Road continues over a lifting bridge at Deptford Creek then joins the A206 at the Greenwich one-way system by the Cutty Sark.

References edit

  1. ^ The London Encyclopaedia, Ben Weinreb, 1983
  2. ^ The Tooley Street fire. – Historical events – Port Cities