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Fleet services

Fleet Services
Fleet services.jpg
Southbound building pictured in 2005
Fleet services is located in Hampshire
Fleet services
Fleet services (Hampshire)
Information
County: Hampshire
Road: M3
Coordinates: 51°17′41″N 0°51′20″W / 51.29483°N 0.85545°W / 51.29483; -0.85545Coordinates: 51°17′41″N 0°51′20″W / 51.29483°N 0.85545°W / 51.29483; -0.85545
Operator: Welcome Break
Date opened: 1973
Website: Welcome Break

Fleet Services is a motorway service station on the M3 near Basingstoke. It is owned by Welcome Break.

Opened in 1973, it was originally built in a Scandinavian style and in 1992 won Loo of the Year Award. Before 2001, when Winchester services opened, it was the only service station on the M3.

In 2006, it was one of the first service stations to carry the new corporate identity for Welcome Break, and along with it came a new Burger King franchise, which then made Fleet Services one of the few motorway service stations to have a Burger King, a KFC and a McDonald's co-exist at the same service station. The McDonald's was part of a 1995 Welcome Break campaign to roll out franchises throughout its chain, but when Welcome Break's parent company was taken over by Granada, the latter's rival franchise of Burger King was instead introduced throughout the chain, but Fleet services (and Woodall), part of the original plan, continued to carry McDonald's despite this.

Fleet services were well known for the 'Fleet cheat' in which drivers took a back exit to the northbound side, which is meant for access by authorised vehicles only (as indicated by two no-entry signs with the aforementioned exception information underneath it), from Pale Lane in order to avoid traffic queues from the motorway. Because of a loophole in legislation, in which the original purpose of the signs cannot be enforced as if it were part of a public highway, thereby only falling under trespassing, people that took the 'Fleet cheat' could not be prosecuted in the normal way for violating these signs. In the 2000s, bollards were installed to prevent unauthorised access, but these bollards often malfunctioned, so ANPR cameras were added in July 2010, which then signalled the end of the 'Fleet cheat'.

The Scott Mills Bridge was officially named on 16 March 2016. The naming followed a campaign by the Scott Mills Show's co-presenter Chris Stark to get things named after the BBC Radio 1 presenter. A plaque was unveiled at the site by Stark.


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