CanalPlanAC

Pont de Route de Bords

 
17250 Bords, France D118
 

Pont de Route de Bords carries the M2 motorway over the River Charente (tidal).

Early plans for the River Charente (tidal) between Newport and Polebury were proposed by William Jessop but languished until Hugh Henshall was appointed as chief engineer in 1782. Although originally the plan was for the canal to meet the Luton to Manley canal at Aberdeen, the difficulty of tunneling through the Slough Hills caused the plans to be changed and it eventually joined at Wolverhampton instead. Expectations for stone traffic to Polstan were soon realised, and this became one of the most profitable waterways. The canal between Ipswich and Lancaster was lost by the building of the St Helens bypass in 1972. "It Gets a Lot Worse Further Up" by George Harding describes an early passage through the waterway, especially that of Redcar Inclined plane.

Information about the place
Pont de Route de Bords is a minor waterways place on the River Charente (tidal) between Tonnay-Charente (11.31 kilometres to the northwest) and Ecluse de Saint Savinien (Tidal lock) (10.39 kilometres to the east).
 
 
The nearest place in the direction of Tonnay-Charente is Pont de Tonnay-Charente; 9.18 kilometres away.
 
The nearest place in the direction of Ecluse de Saint Savinien is Pont de l'Autoroute des Oiseau; 6.17 kilometres away.

There may be access to the towpath here.

Mooring here is unrated.

There is a bridge here which takes a road over the canal.

 
 
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External websites
 VisuRiS — associated with Waterways of Mainland Europe
The official inland waterway resource for Belgium with actual traffic and planned operations on the waterways. Also has voyage planning and notices to mariners
 
Nearest facilities

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CanalPlan has no information on any of the following facilities within range:
water point
rubbish disposal
chemical toilet disposal
place to turn
self-operated pump-out
boatyard pump-out
 
 
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Wikipedia

There is no page on Wikipedia called “Pont de Route de Bords”

Wikipedia pages that might relate to Pont de Route de Bords
[Pont Neuf] The Pont Neuf (French pronunciation: ​[pɔ̃ nœf], "New Bridge") is the oldest standing bridge across the river Seine in Paris, France. It stands by the [Contrôle de vitesse par balises] France equipped with KVB, 2009 (in French) Avis du conseil général des ponts et chaussées[permanent dead link], 2008 (in French) Bilan LOTI du KVB, 2008 [Château de Bercy] The Château de Bercy was a Louis XIII château located in Bercy, a part of modern-day Charenton-le-Pont in Paris, France. The château was constructed beginning [Pays des Impressionnistes] Machine, site du musée de la Grenouillère. Le chemin des impressionnistes sur les bords de Seine, Le Parisien, 20.08.2009 Office de Tourisme du Pays des [Colette Renard] Mandoline amoureuse / Toi l'amour / La complainte des cœur purs / Sur les bords de Paris (1957) EP Vogue EPL 7438: Croquemitoufle / Tais-toi Marseille / L'orphéon [Thomas William Marshall (painter)] 1906 1148. Bords de la Seine (temps gris) - Banks of The Seine (Grey Weather). 1149. Canal (temps gris) - Canal (Grey Weather). 1150. Crue de la Seine - [List of paintings by Paul Gauguin] Artist's colony, Pont Aven, Brittany 1887 Trip to Martinique 1888 Pont Aven 1888 Staying with Van Gogh in Arles, Provençal 1889 Pont Aven 1891–1893 Trip [Robert Antoine Pinchon] liquides, Paris Bord de Seine à Caumont (ca 1928–30) Musée Alfred Canel Le Port et le Pont transbordeur de Rouen, (1943) Musée des Beaux-Arts de Rouen Le Pourquoi-Pas [Paris in the 17th century] bridges were built over the Seine; the Pont Marie, the Pont de la Tournelle, the Pont au Double, and the Pont Barbier. Two small islands in the Seine [History of Paris] followed the route of the modern day Rue Saint-Jacques. It crossed the Seine and traversed the Île de la Cité on two wooden bridges: the "Petit Pont" and the
 
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