A473 shield
A473
Major junctions
Northeast endUpper Boat
Major intersections A470
A4054
A4119
A4222
M4 Junction 35
A48
A4061
A4063
Southwest endLaleston
Location
CountryUnited Kingdom
Constituent countryWales
Primary
destinations
Bridgend
Road network

The A473 is a main road linking Pontypridd with Bridgend in Wales.

The route begins in Upper Boat just south of Pontypridd, at the junction with the A470 and A4054 roads. It crosses the bridge in an easterly direction and continues along the road until it reaches the hill known locally as Power Station hill until it reaches a roundabout near the village of Tonteg after which it heads in a south westerly direction. The road continues along the stretch of road bypassing the villages of Church Village, Llantwit Fardre, Beddau and Llantrisant. After Llantrisant, the road heads in a westerly direction through Llanharan and then turns to a south westerly direction through Pencoed. The road enters Bridgend from the south and passes through the town centre before terminating at the junction with the A48 at Laleston to the west of Bridgend.

Talbot Green Bypass

The Talbot Green by-pass was opened in 1991 to relieve traffic in the village through disabling access to or from Pontyclun via Cowbridge Road, and provided a shorter route for the A473 Bridgend to Pontypridd Road.

Church Village Bypass

Preparatory work on the bypass began in February 2008, and the bypass opened on 7 September 2010.[1] It is a single carriageway, with crawler and overtaking lanes around roundabouts. As the result of this completion the existing A473 from Gwaun Meisgyn to Treforest route was downgraded to the B4595 meaning that "Power Station hill" became part of the A473 Pontypridd to Bridgend route which also meant that the A473 now starts at the A470 junction at Upper Boat rather than Treforest. It also meant that the A4058 in Treforest and Glyn Taff became part of the B4595 Treforest to Talbot Green route meaning that the A4058 will start from the junction at the A470 in Pontypridd and follows its usual route to Treorchy.[2]

Sources

  1. "£90m Church Village bypass opens ahead of schedule". BBC News. 7 September 2010.
  2. "Archived copy" (PDF). churchvillagebypass.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 February 2011. Retrieved 20 July 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

51°32′08″N 3°25′05″W / 51.53542°N 3.41812°W / 51.53542; -3.41812

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