ROADWORK EVENT SUMMARY
A38 Moreton Valence Layby To Church Lane, Moreton Valence, Gloucester between 26 Jun and 1 Nov 2024
Works Description for A38 Moreton Valence Layby To Church Lane, Moreton Valence, Gloucester
Gloucestershire County Council carried out Section 50 on A38 Moreton Valence Layby To Church Lane, Moreton Valence, Gloucester.
These works were categorised as Major.
Multi-way signals were in place for some or all of the period.
The works were originally planned between 26 Jun 2024 and 1 Nov 2024 and were actually completed between 26 Jun 2024 (12:00) and 1 Nov 2024 (16:30). The works impacted the footway, carriageway and verge.
The information for these works was last updated by Gloucestershire County Council on 7 November 2024 at 14:33.
Works Map for A38 Moreton Valence Layby To Church Lane, Moreton Valence, Gloucester
Works Details
Gloucestershire County Council
Gloucestershire County Council
Works Reference | EY099S50-01198A |
Permit Number | 03 |
Place Name |
A38 Moreton Valence Layby To Church Lane Moreton Valence Gloucester |
Proposed Start | 26 Jun 2024 |
Proposed End | 1 Nov 2024 |
Actual Start | 26 Jun 2024 12:00 |
Actual End | 1 Nov 2024 16:30 |
Traffic Management | Multi-way signals |
Impact | Footway, Carriageway, Verge |
Coordinates Lat, Lon |
51.791038 -2.309678 |
Last Updated | 7 Nov 2024 14:33 |
Works Permits for A38 Moreton Valence Layby To Church Lane, Moreton Valence, Gloucester
For the activities hereby permitted, it is a condition of this permit that activities shall not commence before the proposed start date or, in the case of 'immediate works', the start date contained in the application for immediate works and must end by the estimated end date provided on this permit. The proposed start date, actual start date and estimated end date will be as defined.
Applies to all permits.
For the activities hereby permitted, it is a condition of this permit that activities shall not commence before the proposed start date and must commence within the valid starting window period or in the case of immediate works by the actual start date contained in the application for immediate works. Once the activities have commenced, the activities must take no more than [x number of] days in total to be completed. The proposed start date, actual start date and estimated end date are as defined.
Applies to all permits.
For the activities hereby permitted, it is a condition of this permit that, for the traffic management deployed (state type), it is manually operated between (x hours and y hours).
This condition is attached to permits in cases where temporary traffic signals are used. For the activities hereby permitted, it is a condition of this permit that activities using portable traffic signals must have the signals (whether manually operated or not) removed from use as soon as possible and no later than four hours after completion of works irrespective of day of completion.
For the activities hereby permitted, it is a condition of this permit that activities shall not be carried out unless a site information board(s) displaying the permit reference number is on the site at all times for the duration of the works. This must be displayed in a prominent place at all times so that it may be read easily by the public, clearly displaying the correct permit reference number. For immediate works, the display of the permit reference number is required by 10.00am on the next working day after the works have started on site.
Applies to all permits.
Proposed Work Dates
Roadworks are planned in advance and sometimes are proposed to run over a number of days. It may well be that the roadworks start after the proposed start date due to bad weather or other operational delays. Equally, works may complete before the proposed end date as the works may have included a few extra days just in case.
Problems with roadworks?
On rare occasions, issues may occur during or after the completion of roadworks, such as:
- Poor reinstatement of the footpath or the carriageway.
- Rubbish and mess remaining after the works have completed.
- Traffic management issues during the works.
- Equipment left behind after the works have completed.
- Any other issues or disruption that the works may be causing.
In such instances, you should try and contact the organisation carrying out the works in the first instance. If we have contact details available they are shown on the detailed roadworks page.
In the event that the organistion cannot help, then the local authority that authorised the works may be able to help and again, if their contact details are published then we have provided their contact information on our detailed roadworks page.
Unfortunately, here at StreetGuide, we are only publishers of the data provided by the organisations and cannot provide information or assistance on individual works.
Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.