Hunston Junction
Junction with the closed Portsmouth and Arundel Canal
Poyntz Bridge, Chichester PO20 1NR, United Kingdom

Hunston Junction
is a place on the waterways
on the Chichester Canal between
Low Water Channel Chichester Harbour (2 miles and 5¼ furlongs
and 2 locks
to the west) and
Chichester Basin (End of navigation) (1 mile and 1¼ furlongs
to the northwest).
The nearest place in the direction of Low Water Channel Chichester Harbour is Donnington Bridge (Limit of Navigation from the Chichester direction);
5 furlongs
away.
The nearest place in the direction of Chichester Basin is Hunston Junction Bridge;
¼ furlongs
away.
Mooring here is unrated.
| Salterns Lock | 2 miles, 3 furlongs | |
| Yacht Club Footbridge | 2 miles, 1¾ furlongs | |
| Birdham Lock (derelict) | 1 mile, 6½ furlongs | |
| Birdham Road Bridge | 1 mile, 3½ furlongs | |
| Donnington Bridge | 5 furlongs | |
| Hunston Junction | ||
| Hunston Junction Bridge | ¼ furlongs | |
| Chichester Bypass Bridge | 7½ furlongs | |
| South Bank Narrows | 1 mile, ¼ furlongs | |
| Chichester Basin | 1 mile, 1¼ furlongs | |
- Chichester Canal - Boat Trips, Rowing, Fishing, Canoeing, Refreshments — associated with Chichester Canal
- Chichester Canal offers boat trips, refreshments, rowing, fishing, canoeing and walking. Volunteers restore and maintain the canal.
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No information
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
Direction of TV transmitter (From Wolfbane Cybernetic)
There is no page on Wikipedia called “Hunston Junction”
Wikipedia pages that might relate to Hunston Junction
[Portsmouth and Arundel Canal]
Arun to Hunston where it joined the Chichester section of the canal This section of the canal connected the river Arun at Ford to the junction with the
[West Sussex Railway]
Chichester; the station was a short distance south of the LB&SCR station Hunston, where there was a level crossing and a short siding; there was also a
[Portsmouth]
and one to Chichester) and a barge canal from Ford on the River Arun to Hunston, where it joined the canal's Chichester section. The route through Portsea
[Timeline of the Irish War of Independence]
of civilians, killing two and seriously wounding five.[citation needed] Hunston House,Birr, County Offaly One British soldier of K.S.L.I. killed 14 January
[New Lipchis Way]
following the Chichester Canal. This former ship canal runs south to Hunston, then turns sharply west where it joins the former Portsmouth and Arundel
[A74 road]
Transportation. Archived from the original on 29 May 2013. Retrieved 4 July 2013. Hunston, Hugh (31 March 1994). "Treasury pulls plug on final A74 upgrade". The
[London to Portsmouth canal]
canals were specified in the Act. Construction of the barge canal from Hunston in the west to Ford in the east began at Ford on 20 August 1818, and work
[List of closed railway stations in Britain: H-J]
Midland Railway 1960 Hunslet Lane Midland Railway 1851 Hunstanton GER 1969 Hunston West Sussex Railway 1935 Huntingdon East Great Northern and Great Eastern
[Stort Navigation]
is a three-storey brick building, the front of which is rendered. Near Hunston Mill Lock is the brick base of a watermill, which was demolished in 1902
[All Souls Church, Hastings]
Roffey, St Luke's Church, Queen's Park, Brighton and St Leodegar's Church, Hunston. English Heritage stated that while some of his churches "have a routine






























