INQUESTS into the deaths of five members of the Cockburn family who died on the A18 will be opened tomorrow.
Grimsby and North Lincolnshire coroner Paul Kelly will formally open the hearing at Cleethorpes Town Hall.
Husband and wife Dave and Angela, their daughters Bethany and Carley Ann, and one-year-old granddaughter Lacie Jade Stephenson, Bethany's daughter, died following a head-on crash with a lorry on the A18 near to the entrance for The Oaklands Hotel at 12.30pm on Friday.
The family were travelling from their home in Ouston, Chester-le-Street, Durham, to Skegness to take part in a dance festival.
Humberside Police collision investigators carried out a further examination of the scene yesterday on the straight stretch of the road before the bend leading to Laceby Manor golf club.
The A18 was closed to traffic at the roundabout linking the A18 with the A46. The busy road was closed for a short time around mid-day.
Police officers have also been at the scene of the crash to escort grieving relatives of the Cockburn's, as they laid floral tributes to their loved ones.
But a spokesman for Balfour Beatty appealed, through the Grimsby Telegraph, for the crash scene to not become a shrine.
He said: "The family's home and the family business in Durham have had many floral tributes left outside.
"We don't want the scene on the A18 to become like that. The family has visited the site under police escort.
"But it is not a safe place for people to stop to leave flowers. It is a high- speed road and there is nowhere to stop safely. We do not want people crossing that road.
"North East Lincolnshire Council does not have a policy over roadside memorials, as other authorities do.
"It is an issue which has to be treated sensitively."
Meanwhile, NELC said the proposed reduction in the speed on the A18 from 60mph to 50mph will be recommended to the portfolio holder for the environment Councillor Peter Wheatley next month.