GD48 – Taunton Toneway

The Toneway is the heavily used highway route linking Taunton with the M5 motorway at Junction 25. It carries an annual average daily traffic (AADT) of 36,600 vehicles. Weekday peak hours see around 3,000 vehicles per hour.

There are three major junctions on the Toneway – Heron Gate Roundabout, Creech Castle traffic signals and Obridge Roundabout. All three junctions will require capacity increases to accommodate growing demand. The most urgent is Creech Castle, which is the subject of this project.

The Creech Castle junction is a large signalised junction, with segregated left-turns on each of the four approaches. The A358 Toneway forms the east and west arms of the junction. The A38 Bridgwater Road lead north, via Monkton Heathfield, towards Bridgwater and to the south Bridgwater Road provides access to a largely residential area of Taunton. Both Bridgwater Road arms are single-carriageway. The four left-turn movements are provided using short give-way slip roads. During certain times of the day mainline vehicle queuing prevents full utilisation of these arms particularly on the northern side of the junction. The Creech Castle signals suffer from high levels of congestion during the morning and evening peak hours.

The main components of the improvement scheme are:-

  • Widening of the Toneway East Approach from two to three ahead lanes
  • Widening of the Bridgwater Road South approach to four lanes at the stop line, with three lanes for right turning and traffic and a separate lane for right turning traffic. One of the right turn lanes is shared to provide a straight ahead movement. The existing segregated left turn lane will be removed.
  • Removal of the dedicated right turn lane from Toneway West to Bridgwater Road South with this lane now marked for straight ahead traffic. The existing segregated give-way left turn lane on this arm will remain.

The A38 North will have an additional right turn lane and the left turn will be increased to two lanes at the stop line.

Growth Deal Funding: £6.7m

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    David Ralph

    Chief Executive

    David Ralph started as Chief Executive of Heart of South West LEP at the beginning of June 2018. Previously, he had spent 5 years as CEO of the Derby, Derbyshire, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire (D2N2) LEP from 2013 where he oversaw the development of the D2N2 Strategic Economic Plan and sector strategies, 3 Growth Deals with HM Government to deliver a £1billion capital investment programme, securing and implementing £200m ESIF programme, the Derby and Nottingham Enterprise Zone, the D2N2 Skills Deal and Time for Innovation programme, community fund and led the executive team to develop the HS2 East Midlands hub. He was also closely involved in the proposed North Midlands Devolution Deal and one of the key architects in establishing the Midlands Engine, chairing the officer steering group. Whilst in this role David was a NED of the Nottingham Enterprise Zone, and Marketing NG, the Outer Estates Foundation and a Governor of Nottingham College and on the advisory Board of Nottingham Business School.

    Before the East Midlands, David was CEO of the Have Gateway Partnership working closely with local stakeholders including the ports of Felixstowe, Harwich and Ipswich and BT Adadastral Park across Suffolk and Essex and prior to that was Chief Exec of the Barton Hill New Deal for Communities programme in Bristol and the Nelm Development Trust in Norwich.

    David is a keen sailor, walker and trail runner.