There are warnings that drivers will face fresh delays next month after a second full weekend closure of the M25 was announced.
It comes just a few weeks after a nearby section was shut so a bridge could be demolished in what was the motorway’s first-ever planned daytime closure since it opened in 1986.
From 9pm on Friday 10 May until 6am on Monday 13 May, a seven-mile stretch between junctions 9 and 10 in Surrey will be shut in both directions.
This will be carried out so concrete beams for a new bridge and gantry can be lifted into place.
It will be the second of five weekend planned closures of the motorway – which encircles London – as part of a £317m project to improve J10.
The scheme, due to be completed in summer 2025, will increase the number of lanes at J10, which is one of the country’s busiest and most dangerous motorway junctions.
Among the people affected in May are set to be those travelling to, from and between the UK’s two busiest airports, Heathrow and Gatwick.
There were fears of severe congestion on diversion routes along A roads ahead of the first closure of a five-mile stretch between J10 and J11 in March.
But many drivers followed advice to avoid the area, meaning long hold-ups were avoided.
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National Highways senior project manager Jonathan Wade has warned the next shutdown will be “far from a repeat of the previous closure” as the diversion routes are “longer and will be different for over-height vehicles and all other traffic”.
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