CanalPlanAC

Hunston Junction

 
Junction with the closed Portsmouth and Arundel Canal
Poyntz Bridge, Chichester PO20 1NR, United Kingdom
 
Information about the place
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 Lock2 miles, 3 furlongs
Yacht Club Footbridge2 miles, 1¾ furlongs
Birdham Lock (derelict)1 mile, 6½ furlongs
Birdham Road Bridge1 mile, 3½ furlongs
Donnington Bridge5 furlongs
Hunston Junction
Hunston Junction Bridge¼ furlongs
Chichester Bypass Bridge7½ furlongs
South Bank Narrows1 mile, ¼ furlongs
Chichester Basin1 mile, 1¼ furlongs
 
 
Amenities
 
Maps
If you are a user and are logged on, or if you are actively planning a route, a map will be displayed here.
Show on external mapping site: Google | OSM | Bing
 
External websites
 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.
 
Nearest facilities

Mouseover for more information or show routes to facility

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)
 
 
Geograph
 
Wikipedia

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
 
Google