5 December is the 50th anniversary of the first stretch of motorway in the UK and according to the AA; motorways have transformed the way we travel.
5
December is the 50th anniversary of the first stretch of motorway in the UK and
according to the AA; motorways have
transformed the way we travel. On 5 December 1958, the day the 8 mile Preston
bypass opened, the AA was ready to help motorists. Robert Gornall was the AA's
first motorway patrol and he was on duty on the Preston by Pass (now the M6)
from day one – he even attended the opening ceremony. Robert recalls that in
those early motorway days, when there was no speed limit or hard shoulder,
things were very different when it came to dealing with breakdowns.
Robert
said: "This was entirely new and when we reached a broken down car we
simply pushed it, bumper to bumper, out of the way to a place of safety where
we could fix it – our vehicles were fitted with special rubber bumpers so as
not to cause any damage. And breakdowns came thick and fast because cars just
couldn't cope with the higher speed – engines just simply blew. The vehicles we
used were Ford Escorts and even a soft top Land Rover."
AA
President Edmund King said: "1958 really was the start of the motorway age
of motoring. Britain's every growing band of motorists increasingly found they
were able to stretch the boundaries of work and leisure when unthinkable
journeys of the past gradually became the norm.
"Perhaps
we should now be asking ourselves about the next 50 years – are we going to
continue to invest in our motorways to build on their success, or do we want
traffic to return to those places that the motorways by-passed? Will motorways
become high tech with electronic control of cars to maintain their distance or
USA style multi-lane freeways?
Motorway facts
The AA, the UK's largest
motoring organisation, was already 68 years old when Britain's first motorway
opened in 1958. That milestone however was probably the most significant event
for Britain's growing population of private motorists.
Motorway music
There
have even been songs written about motorways, indeed three of the top ten tunes
to drive to on the AA Zone are inspired by
motorways.
Road
to Hell – Chris Rea (thought to be about the M25)
2468 Motorway – Tom Robinson Band
Autobahn – Kraftwerk
Ten key dates in the history of British
motorways
1946
The
first map was published showing a projected English motorway system in a form
that can be compared to today's reality. The M1, M4 M5 M6 M62 and M18 are all
there, along with a circle that would eventually represent the M25.
December 1958
The
opening of the Preston bypass – both the first stretch of motorway in
Britain, and the first 8.3 miles of the M6.
Although
modified over the years into a 4 lane motorway, originally it looked little
like a modern motorway – it had turf shoulders, no crash barrier, and by
today's standards, little traffic.
November 1959
The
opening of the M1, then looked upon as the London-to-Birmingham
Motorway.
Its
61.5 miles symbolised the start of the motorway age. Although widened, much of
this motorway, complete with its 1950s bridges is still in use.
December 1965
The
introduction of the 70mph speed limit on an experimental basis,
replacing a truly derestricted road.
5December
is the 50th anniversary of the first stretch of motorway in the UK and
according to the AA - the home
of Car Insurance and Breakdown Cover - motorways
have transformed the way we travel.
On5
December 1958, the day the 8 mile Preston bypass opened, the AA was ready to
help motorists. Robert Gornall was the AA's first motorway patrol and he was on
duty on the Preston by Pass (now the M6) from day one – he even attended the
opening ceremony. Robert recalls that in those early motorway days, when there
was no speed limit or hard shoulder, things were very different when it came to
dealing with breakdowns.
Robert
said: "This was entirely new and when we reached a broken down car we simply
pushed it, bumper to bumper, out of the way to a place of safety where we could
fix it – our vehicles were fitted with special rubber bumpers so as not to
cause any damage. And breakdowns came thick and fast because cars just couldn't
cope with the higher speed – engines just simply blew. The vehicles we used
were Ford Escorts and even a soft top Land Rover."
AA
President Edmund King said: "1958 really was the start of the motorway age
of motoring. Britain's every growing band of motorists increasingly found they
were able to stretch the boundaries of work and leisure when unthinkable
journeys of the past gradually became the norm.
"Perhaps
we should now be asking ourselves about the next 50 years – are we going to
continue to invest in our motorways to build on their success, or do we want
traffic to return to those places that the motorways by-passed? Will motorways
become high tech with electronic control of cars to maintain their distance or
USA style multi-lane freeways?
Motorway
facts
The
AA, the UK's largest motoring organisation, was already 68 years old when
Britain's first motorway opened in 1958. That milestone however was probably
the most significant event for Britain's growing population of private
motorists.
Motorway
music
There
have even been songs written about motorways, indeed three of the top ten tunes
to drive to on the AA Zone are inspired by
motorways.
Road
to Hell – Chris Rea (thought to be about the M25)
2468 Motorway – Tom Robinson Band
Autobahn – Kraftwerk
Ten key
dates in the history of British motorways
1946
The
first map was published showing a projected English motorway system in a form
that can be compared to today's reality. The M1, M4 M5 M6 M62 and M18 are all
there, along with a circle that would eventually represent the M25.
December
1958
The
opening of the Preston bypass – both the first
stretch of motorway in Britain, and the first 8.3 miles of the
M6.
Although
modified over the years into a 4 lane motorway, originally it looked little
like a modern motorway – it had turf shoulders, no crash barrier, and by
today's standards, little traffic.
November
1959
The
opening of the M1,
then looked upon as the London-to-Birmingham Motorway.
Its61.5
miles symbolised the start of the motorway age. Although widened, much of this
motorway, complete with its 1950s bridges is still in use.
December
1965
The
introduction of the 70mph
speed limit on an experimental basis, replacing a truly
derestricted road.
The
limit was made permanent in 1967 and led to a 20 per cent reduction in
casualties on the growing motorway network.
October
1986
TheM25 was completed and
officially opened.
The
first pieces of the London Orbital Motorway were completed in September 1975and
the whole ring was formally opened in October 1986.
Prior
to the M25 there had been many plans for motorway "boxes" around
London.
January
1991
TheM40 was opened, marking the
completion of the last major link of the English motorway system.
May 1995
The
variable speed limit
on the M25 was introduced allowing speed limits to be automatically adjusted to
match traffic flows. This helped significantly to increase the traffic capacity
of the road and reduced holdups on what had become known as the world's largest
car park.
October
2000
The
completion of the M60
made Manchester Britain's third city to be encircled by motorways.
December
2003
TheM6
Toll – Britain's first tolled
motorway is opened, relieving congestion on the M6 to the north
east of Birmingham.
TheM6
remained open as an alternative.
September
2006
Along
series of modifications to the M42 was completed with automated traffic control
not only allowing variable speed limits but also allowing hard shoulder running in peak
times – two measures which reduce peak hour congestion, and are likely to
spread to the rest of the network.
Where
the AA sees the future of motorways
Capacity
The
Government has committed to a 6 year £6bn investment programme to improve
strategic roads.
However,
it's not all good news. Some new capacity on motorways will be achieved by
using the hard shoulder at busy times, and also perhaps by introducing 'pay
lanes'. AA members through the AA/Populus Panel tell us that:
·
50% support hard
shoulder running at busy times32% oppose (and of those 17% strongly oppose)
·
53% oppose new pay lanes (33% strongly oppose)
·
58% oppose paying a toll to use a car share lane when alone (38% strongly oppose)
The
AA says that motorway widening would represent good value for money by reducing
congestion and may be more 'sustainable' than temporary fixes like using the
hard shoulder.
There
should be no need for major new motorways across green fields as Britain's
motorway needs were accurately defined and largely addressed over a 50 year
period.
Roadworks
Britain's
motorway road works rate highly in terms of their
safety and conduct compared with many other European countries. However, delays
still frustrate drivers and whilst safety is achieved by having strict speed
limits the AA says these should be variable so that the limit matches the conditions
at any given time. It's ludicrous for example to have a 50mph limit when the
workers have gone home.
Incidents
The
Government has set journey time reliability targets for the worst performing
strategic roads.
In2008
however the Highways Agency failed to meet the target, meaning that journey
time reliability got worse on two thirds of the routes under scrutiny.
The
AA believes that the Highways Agency must get slicker at managing the
unexpected and ensure that all key sections of motorways have properly managed
and signed contingency diversion routes.
Creaking
junctions
So
often the performance of a motorway is hindered by a weak road link or junction
on a local authority road adjacent to the motorway.
Highway
authorities now have a network management duty under the Traffic Management
Act2004. If a motorway is seizing up due to inadequate local roads something
must be done.
Information
Variable
message signs are now an intrinsic part of the UK motorway scene and they are vital
tools to keep drivers informed.
The
quality of information has improved but there is no room for complacency. Traffic
messages must be truly real-time for drivers to keep their faith in them.
Some messages still leave drivers wondering – and
whilst the AA welcomes messages being spread back much further from any
incident we also point out that long distance travellers don't have local
knowledge so care is needed explaining where distant incidents are so that the
message can be understood by all.
Services
The
UK's motorway service areas have improved standards
markedly in recent years. However, prices can be high and at busy times they
can be overcrowded.
The
AA welcomes the government's intention to allow smaller rest area type facilities
but urges caution where safety and security are concerned. It will be better to
have a filling station with basic supplies and parking than an unmanned rest
area which could become a haven for crime.
Safety
UK
motorways are amongst the safest in Europe if not the world and they should remain
so.
Some
drivers are nervous about using motorways but in reality they are at far more risk
driving on some of the roads they may use to avoid them.
Permile
travelled a driver on a rural road faces three times the motorway risk of a
fatal accident. A driver on an urban road faces eight times the risk.
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