Southsea Hoverport
Southsea Hoverport | |||||
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Southsea Hoverport in March 2026 | |||||
| General information | |||||
| Location | Clarence Esplanade Southsea Portsmouth PO5 3AD | ||||
| Coordinates | 50°47′07″N 1°06′00″W / 50.785143°N 1.099939°W | ||||
| Operated by | Hovertravel | ||||
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Southsea Hoverport is a hoverport in Southsea, Portsmouth, England, run by Hovertravel, with hovercraft services between Southsea, and Ryde on the Isle of Wight. Adjacent to Clarence Pier, it is the UK's only scheduled hovercraft link, and the world's longest running hovercraft service.[1]
The journeys occur every fifteen minutes, and take under ten minutes.[2] The journey time is more than two times faster than the catamaran between Portsmouth and Ryde, and more than four times faster than the ferry between Portsmouth and Fishbourne.[3]
History
The hovercraft route between Southsea and Ryde opened in July 1965. At the time, it did not have a timetable. Instead, the 38-seat SR.N6 hovercraft just ran when it had enough passengers. As of 2021, the hovercraft can carry 78 passengers.[2]
On 4 March 1972, one of the hovercraft travelling from Ryde to Southsea capsized 360m away from Southsea Pier, due to strong winds. It was carrying 27 people. Five people died as a result, including seven-year-old Julie O'Connell and 48-year-old David Jones, whose bodies were never found.[4]
See also
References
- ^ Calder, Simon (3 October 2018). "Train passengers warned not to travel via a station 137 miles away". The Independent. Retrieved 20 March 2026.
- ^ a b Noble, Will (13 August 2021). "How the world's last hovercraft service became a Covid lifeline". CNN. Retrieved 20 March 2026.
- ^ Parkinson, Justin (9 November 2015). "What happened to passenger hovercraft?". BBC News. Retrieved 20 March 2026.
- ^ "Hovercraft capsize disaster off Hampshire coast recalled 50 years on". BBC News. 4 March 2022. Retrieved 20 March 2026.
External links
- Map sources for Southsea Hoverport