Bath is approximately south-east of the larger city and port of
Bristol, to which it is linked by the
A4 road, and is a similar distance south of the
M4 motorway. Bath and North East Somerset is also served by the
A37 and
A368 trunk roads, and a network of smaller roads. Bath is also south-west of
Chippenham, and south-west of
Corsham. Bath is connected to Bristol and the sea by the
River Avon, navigable via
locks by small boats. The river was connected to the
River Thames and London by the
Kennet & Avon Canal in 1810 via
Bath Locks; this waterway – closed for many years, but restored in the last years of the 20th century – is now popular with
narrow boat users. Bath is on
National Cycle Route 4, with one of Britain's first
cycleways, the
Bristol & Bath Railway Path, to the west, and an eastern route toward London on the canal towpath. Although Bath does not have an airport, the city is about from
Bristol Airport, which may be reached by road or by rail via
Bristol Temple Meads station. Bath is served by the
Bath Spa railway station (designed by
Isambard Kingdom Brunel), which has regular connections to
London Paddington,
Bristol Temple Meads,
Cardiff Central,
Swansea,
Exeter St Davids,
Plymouth and
Penzance (see
Great Western Main Line), and also
Westbury,
Warminster,
Frome,
Salisbury,
Southampton Central,
Portsmouth Harbour and
Brighton (see
Wessex Main Line). Services are provided by
Great Western Railway. There are suburban stations on the main line at
Oldfield Park and
Keynsham which have a limited commuter service to Bristol.
Green Park station was once operated by the
Somerset & Dorset Joint Railway, whose line (always steam driven) climbed over the
Mendip Hills and served many towns and villages on its run to
Bournemouth; this example of an English rural line was closed by the
Beeching cuts in March 1966, with few remaining signs of its existence, but its Bath station building survives and now houses a number of shops. The 2004
Bristol/Bath to South Coast Study was commissioned as a result of the
de-trunking in 1999 of the A36/A46 trunk road network from Bath to Southampton. ==Media==