M25 closed: Travel chaos as part of major motorway is shut for first time ever today with urgent warning for drivers

TRAVEL chaos is expected to hit around London and the M25 today as the major ring road is set to shut for the first time ever.

One councillor called the closure a “nightmare” as drivers could be stuck in traffic for five hours.

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The M25 closed on Friday night and will reopen on Monday morning at 6amCredit: Terry Harris
The eight-lane is empty on Saturday morning with no traffic on the key road

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The eight-lane is empty on Saturday morning with no traffic on the key roadCredit: Terry Harris
A bridge is set to be demolished and a new one built

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A bridge is set to be demolished and a new one builtCredit: Terry Harris
Diversions are set up for people travelling on the important ring road

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Diversions are set up for people travelling on the important ring roadCredit: w8media

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Hollywood A-Lister Tom Cruise has hired a helicopter to fly cast and crew to set with the chaos unfolding below.

Filming of his eighth spy flick is taking place near the five-mile stretch between junctions 10 and 11 which was shut from 9pm last night

The stretch will reopen at 6am on Monday.

Work during the closure will see a bridge demolished and a new gantry installed.

Tens of thousands of drivers will be stuck in gridlocked traffic over the weekend during the unprecedented closure.

It is the first planned daytime closure of the motorway – which encircles London – since it opened in 1986.

An 11.5-mile diversion route has been created to direct motorway traffic along A roads.

Daryl Jordan, of Woking Borough Council, told the PA news agency the Byfleet Road, which is close to junction 10, had been “chock-a-block” on Friday afternoon.

He said residents will be “affected massively”.

“It is pulling people apart.

Heavy traffic on British roads

“I mean, you know, when you work full-time and then you’re going to get home tonight from work thinking ‘I must fill the fridge up’ and you can’t even get into your own village.

“It’s going to be a nightmare.

“Just going down the road to get milk is going to be a problem tomorrow or picking up your dry cleaning.”

Business owners in the areas along the diversion route have told of cuts they have made to their services in anticipation of traffic.

Mark Pollak, owner of Billy Tong, which caters for events and sells biltong at markets, said he expects to see 50% of the firm’s turnover for the weekend go “down the drain”.

Pollak said he had to refuse a request to cater an event in Guildford and had to cancel its stall at Surbiton Farmers’ Market on Saturday with staff not wanting to face expected traffic to get to jobs.

“It has a massive impact on my business,” he said.

“I’ve cancelled events, I can’t get customers to come and collect stuff, I can’t get my staff to go to events.”

It has a massive impact on my business

Mark Pollak

Ammara Kanwal, director of Code Kids, cancelled a coding club session due to take place at Cobham Free School on Saturday over fears she would not be able to make it there on time.

She said: “It was a bit of a disappointment.

“I am the one who cancelled, it was my business, so I am having to issue a refund for tomorrow.

“I mean, nobody wants to travel somewhere for two hours if it doesn’t take that long, it’s not fair.”

But some businesses are not expecting much impact.

The Black Prince pub in Addlestone does not expect the diversion route to affect its business, with one of its staff members explaining customers are mostly local and in walking distance.

Motoring experts are warning that official estimates of congestion levels may be “optimistic” while local councillors in areas where motorway traffic will be diverted are anticipating “gridlock”.

The M25 normally carries between 4,000 and 6,000 vehicles in each direction every hour from 10am until 9pm at weekends between junctions nine and 11.

This includes many airline passengers travelling to, from and between the UK’s two busiest airports, Heathrow and Gatwick.

National Highways said modelling carried out while it was developing its plans for this weekend indicated vehicles would face delays of up to five hours without mitigation measures, such as urging drivers to stay away.

The Government-owned company believes its awareness campaign will help reduce traffic levels by approximately 50%, meaning the length of time added to journeys will be limited to around an hour.

It is urging drivers not to use their sat navs to attempt to find quicker alternative routes on minor roads due to fears this could cause major congestion.

Steve Gooding, director of motoring research charity the RAC Foundation said: “We must hope National Highways has overstated its dire predictions of sat navs adding to the traffic chaos by taking drivers off the official diversion route, because the temptation to try to skip the queues will be intense, and the impact on actual journey times uncertain.

“Whilst the modelling suggests around an hour might be added to people’s travel time, that will feel optimistic to anyone used to the frustrations of driving round the M25 on days even without major construction works under way.”

Read more on the Scottish Sun

Four more daytime closures of the M25 will take place up to September.

The project, due to be completed in summer 2025, will increase the number of lanes at junction 10, one of the UK’s busiest and most dangerous motorway junctions.

Tom Cruise’s M25 airlift

It could be a scene from one of his blockbuster Mission: Impossible movies — Tom Cruise flying in cast and crew while chaos unfolds below.

The enterprising star, 61, went into crisis mode as the M25 closes for an entire weekend for the first time.

Tom is desperate to keep shooting Mission: Impossible 8 at Surrey’s Longcross Studios after being dogged by delays.

The helipad at Battersea, South West London, is among those readied for affected cast and crew.

A source said last night: “The M25 closure is a headache for most people but not for Tom. He is so keen to keep Mission: Impossible 8 in production that he’s got helicopters on standby in London to fly his crew over to Longcross.

“It sounds excessive but delaying work on the film is a bigger problem and Tom is such a professional — he’d move heaven and Earth to keep the show on the road.

“Staff on the movie or stars who are needed for filming have been told if they can’t get to Longcross because of the M25 closures they’ll be flown in by chopper.

“It’s a feat that is just like a scene out of one of Tom’s films.”

The road through the Junction 11 approach by Weybridge is currently empty

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The road through the Junction 11 approach by Weybridge is currently emptyCredit: w8media
Some travellers spoke of having to change their plans on Saturday as they said they would be stuck in traffic

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Some travellers spoke of having to change their plans on Saturday as they said they would be stuck in trafficCredit: w8media

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