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The Thames Path uses the existing Thames towpath between Inglesham and Putney Bridge wherever possible. The former Thames and Severn Canal entrance is the present-day limit of navigation [13] [14] for powered craft, and is one and a half miles upstream of the highest lock (St John's Lock), near Lechlade. [15]
The Thames Down Link is a 24 km (15 mi) official walking route linking the Thames Path and the North Downs Way. It starts in the town centre of Kingston upon Thames and finishes at Box Hill & Westhumble railway station .
The Thames Path crosses this bridge. Hampton Court Bridge Concrete bridge, steel bridge, road bridge, arch bridge: 51°24′14″N 0°20′33″W: 1933: From Hampton Court to East Molesey. The Thames Path crosses this bridge. Hampton Ferry Ferry route: 51°24′43″N 0°21′45″W: 1519: From Hampton to Hurst Park, East Molesey.
The Thames flows through or alongside Ashton Keynes, Cricklade, Lechlade, Oxford, Abingdon-on-Thames, Wallingford, Goring-on-Thames and Streatley (at the Goring Gap), Pangbourne and Whitchurch-on-Thames, Reading, Wargrave, Henley-on-Thames, Marlow, Maidenhead, Windsor and Eton, Staines-upon-Thames and Egham, Chertsey, Shepperton, Weybridge ...
Sign marking the Ridgeway where it meets the Thames Path. The Ridgeway is a 3.5-mile (5.6 km) [1] [2] [3] "cycling permitted pedestrian priority" footpath owned by Thames Water in southeast London. It runs between Plumstead and Crossness on an embankment that covers the Joseph Bazalgette Southern Outfall Sewer.
The Thames Path is a National Trail that follows the length of the River Thames for 184 miles (296 km), from its source near Kemble, Gloucestershire, to the Thames Barrier at Charlton, London. From Richmond to the Thames Barrier, some 28 mi or 45 km, it is within Greater London , passing Kew Gardens and the Wetlands Centre at Barnes and ...
This is a list of cycle routes in London that have been waymarked with formal route signage include 'Cycleways' (including 'Cycle Superhighways' and 'Quietways) and the older London Cycle Network, all designated by the local government body Transport for London (TfL), National Cycle Network routes designated by the sustainable transport charity Sustrans, and miscellaneous 'Greenways' created ...
The path. The Thames Estuary Path was established in 2014, it is part of the King Charles III England Coast Path and runs along the northern (Essex) side of the Thames estuary. It is promoted by Essex County Council and c2c train company. It complements the Saffron Trail from south-east to north-west Essex.