0 a place where a railway and a road cross each other, usually with gates that stop the traffic while a train goes past
Examples 7 and 8 are the classical level crossing example (3 and 4 trains).
I suspect that they are different from the kind of level crossing envisaged in clause 14(3).
I am sure that he will accept that it is not a level crossing.
Is he aware that there is a long history of attempts to get something safer—for instance, a footbridge—where this unmanned level crossing is?
Not only was the level crossing to be closed but the lane leading to the crossing was to be stopped up.
That level crossing is costing the same railway company to-day over £500 a year.
The responsibility of a railway company in connection with the safety arrangements at a level crossing depends upon the nature of the crossing.
If that had happened, the proposed scheme would have become redundant through the removal of the level crossing.