Work to fix water leak causes 'horrendous' gridlock

Jon Cuthill
BBC News, Southampton
Reporting fromSouthampton
The start of the roadworks on the A35 Redbridge flyover saw disruption across the city

Drivers faced "horrendous" queues of up to two hours as roadworks got underway on a major route.

The eastbound carriageway of the A35 Redbridge flyover into Southampton from Totton has been closed to allow Southern Water to find and fix a leak.

The roadworks had been due to get underway 24 hours earlier but were cancelled without warning due to an "operational issue".

Southern Water apologised for the disruption but says the road will remain closed for a number of days.

Two lanes of traffic are queued back up a hill with some drivers reporting delays of up to two hours.
Motorists found it slow going getting into the city from the east

The closure of one of the main routes into the city has led to frustration and long delays for local residents and motorists.

George Williams, from Ashurst, set off early but sat in traffic for more than 50 minutes: "I'm thinking about ditching the cars somewhere on the way and walking the rest of the way but got to find somewhere first."

Further back, Melanie Thomas, from Totton, had travelled less than 1.6km (1 mile) in an hour but was more understanding about the roadworks: "It has to be done but could have been done better, much better organised."

A blonde woman wearing glasses sits in a car frustrated by the delays caused by the rescheduled roadworks.
It took Karen Parsons half an hour to travel 800m (0.5 miles)

Meanwhile, Karen Parsons, who had moved 800m (0.5 miles) in half an hour, described the delays as "horrendous".

"Last minute change by Southern Water not to do it yesterday and change all the arrangements very late in the day kind of makes it inevitable not to avoid it really.

"Not looking good for a start to work," she said.

Dan West admitted his morning could have been better.

He said his usual one minute journey had taken 50 minutes and counting: "Busy enough as it is with the school runs, trying to get to work. I knew it would be bad but not quite this bad."

Southern Water says it is trying to pinpoint the exact location of the leak.

A spokesperson said: "Due to the nature of the work the eastbound carriageway will remain closed for a number of days - with the closure being 24/7 to allow our teams to work.

"We will provide a further update on progress on Wednesday morning. We're sorry for the disruption this work is causing."