Wolverhampton Ring Road
The A4150 Wolverhampton Inner Ring Road is a ring road that encircles the city centre of Wolverhampton in the West Midlands, England. The circumference of the road is around. Technically, the route is listed as an "Inner Ring Road", although only a tiny section of the "Outer Ring Road" was ever constructed with only one of the two designed carriageways built. A second carriageway was built in 2017 along a short stretch between Patshull Avenue and Stafford Road. The section of outer ring road is called Wobaston Road and locally classified by Wolverhampton City Council as U119.
Sections
It is divided into seven sections, between seven junctions with nearly all of the main routes into the city. The seven sections are all named after saints. Originally the names chosen referred to nearby churches; however, with one section still to be built, it was noticed that St George, St Andrew and St Patrick were included, but St David was not. Thus the final section was named after St David, but not for any local reason. At the time there was a call for it to be named St. James after the church and square which once occupied the site.Clockwise from the south-west corner, the sections are as follows:
- Ring Road St Mark's ;
- Ring Road St Andrew's ;
- Ring Road St Peter's ;
- Ring Road St Patrick's ;
- Ring Road St David's ;
- Ring Road St George's.
Three main roads into the city do not meet the Ring Road, these being the A454 Compton Road from the west, the A459 from the south and the A460 Cannock Road from the north-east; they meet the A41, A4123 and A449 respectively slightly further away from the Ring Road, but within in each case. The A459 used to meet the Ring Road at the junction of Dudley Road and Snow Hill but following the introduction of the A4123 gyratory system as part of the construction of the St. George's section of the Ring Road, it has terminated at Grove Street although some maps still show it as continuing to the Ring Road. The A459 also used to continue along Stafford Street to Five Ways Island along the former A460, B4158 and B4160 before the A449 was rerouted down Stafford Street instead of Waterloo Road which was then declassified.