Rachel Johnson 7pm - 10pm
'It's going to be horrific': M25 'doomsday warning' as residents brace for gridlock over weekend closure
15 March 2024, 17:32 | Updated: 15 March 2024, 17:54
Motorists have been warned of travel chaos from Friday evening as they brace for a gridlock ahead of the closure of five miles of the M25.
Listen to this article
Loading audio...
The road will be shut between junctions 10 (A3 Wisley) and 11 (A320 Chertsey Interchange) in Surrey from 9pm on Friday evening to 6am on Monday.
Drivers have been warned only to travel if necessary as the closure is expected to cause heavy congestion.
It marks the first time in history that the motorway has been closed during the day for roadworks, with around 6,000 vehicles an hour set to be detoured off the M25 and on to local A roads.
The move has sparked concern among residents in the affected areas, with some stockpiling groceries ahead of the closure.
Read more: How to avoid the travel chaos caused by the M25 closure - alternative routes explained
CLOSING TONIGHT! LATEST UPDATES WILL BE POSTED ON X @HighwaysSEAST.
— National Highways: South-East (@HighwaysSEAST) March 15, 2024
M25 closed both ways J10-11 from 9pm tonight, Fri 15 Mar to 6am Mon 18 Mar. Only travel this stretch if essential. Long delays expected. pic.twitter.com/ltWmi2b8MZ
It comes after Project leader at National Highways, Jonathan Wade, told LBC News that people should “find something to do at home” rather than travel this weekend.
"Please, if you can either avoid travelling completely, find something to do at home – decorate the bathroom or something, or play in the garden," he said.
"If you must go, travel by train, walk, use a bicycle. I don't mind really what you do.
"Avoid driving anywhere around those diversionary routes around Painshill, Byfleet, West Byfleet on the eastern side of Woking. It will be in your interests."
Laura Frankland, 51, who lives in the village of Send, told the Times: "It’s going to be horrific."
She added: "I care for my mother who lives in a different village and I have to drive every day. But not this weekend.
"We are going to be staying home — it’s going to be lockdown for the weekend. We’ve done the shopping early … it’s going to be bumper-to-bumper everywhere in Surrey."
The closure is in place to allow the demolition of a bridleway bridge and installation of a large gantry.
It is the first of five closures between now and September.
National Highways said the improvement scheme will lead to an increase in the number of lanes to "make journeys safer and improve traffic flow".
They added it will make it easier and safer to enter and exit the M25 and provide safer entry roads for Wisley, Pyrford, Old Byfleet and RHS Wisley.
They said it will also reduce the pollution caused by traffic jams.
M25 CLOSED THIS WEEKEND J10-11
— National Highways (@NationalHways) March 14, 2024
The M25 will be closed both ways J10-11 from 9pm this Fri 15 Mar to 6am Mon 18 Mar.
Only travel this stretch if essential. Long delays expected.
Check updates:
▶️ https://t.co/YiY0SVelYb pic.twitter.com/ZwULpwe7AD
Ottershaw councillor for Runnymede Borough Council Malcolm Cressey said: "I think it's going to be a difficult period but we have to sort out those bridges.
"I think it's going to be very disruptive. I would certainly urge anybody to try and avoid the area. It could end up with all sorts of gridlock in our area."
Canalside councillor for Woking Borough Council Tahir Aziz said: "We've never experienced something like this before.
"It will have a significant impact in this area. It will cause huge disruption and delays, and a lot of traffic jams."
Byfleet councillor Daryl Jordan told the Telegraph: “Basically they’ve slaughtered us in the area, they’ve dumped it on us and we’re suffering.
“I’m expecting to see absolute gridlock this weekend – everybody I know, and I’ve been in this area for years, has said they’ve been shopping already, they haven’t made any plans and if anything it will be like Covid lockdown and people will be walking the canals and what’s left of our greenbelt.
“It’s wrong, they’ve taken two days of our lives away – two days when we’re off work.”