We chose not to use a vein to bypass a popliteal artery lesion in four preferring to perform an autotransplantation of a proximal segment of the homolateral superficial femoral artery. The proximal arterial segment translated downstream being replaced by a synthetic graft. This approach was used to treat a popliteal aneurysm in two patients and cystic adventitiel disease in two others. The great saphenous was unfit for bypass in two patients. One patient died with a patent transplant nine months after surgery due to an unrelated urological problem. The other three patients were alive and symptom free, at least forty-two months after surgery. All three had a patent transplant despite obstruction of the proximal synthetic bypass in one patient. Provided that the outcome in a larger number of cases confirms these favourable results, we think that this technique offers an attractive alternative to venous bypass, at least whenever a venous graft cannot be used.