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#1
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If you look on Google earth at the northern most bit of the M23 north
of the M25 just where it joins the A23 you can see what looks like an unmetalled bit of the motorway continue over a bridge with trucks and cars parked on it. Further on still theres a completely unused bridge that goes over the A23 surrounded by scrubby woods. Anyone know what this bit is used for now and was the M23 originally supposed to have continued further north than it does now? B2003 |
#2
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Boltar wrote:
If you look on Google earth at the northern most bit of the M23 north of the M25 just where it joins the A23 you can see what looks like an unmetalled bit of the motorway continue over a bridge with trucks and cars parked on it. Further on still theres a completely unused bridge that goes over the A23 surrounded by scrubby woods. Anyone know what this bit is used for now and was the M23 originally supposed to have continued further north than it does now? Turn on the "Google Earth Community" layer in Google Earth. Someone called "londingham" has placed a placemark there with a comment that it was left unfinished in the 1970's. http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthrea.../Number/331643 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M23_motorway No idea about what the bit is used for though, but looks like some kind of storage area for highway construction/maintenance works or something like that. -- Olof Lagerkvist ICQ: 724451 Web: http://here.is/olof |
#3
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In article . com,
Boltar wrote: If you look on Google earth at the northern most bit of the M23 north of the M25 just where it joins the A23 you can see what looks like an unmetalled bit of the motorway continue over a bridge with trucks and cars parked on it. Further on still theres a completely unused bridge that goes over the A23 surrounded by scrubby woods. Anyone know what this bit is used for now and was the M23 originally supposed to have continued further north than it does now? I don't know of a better site for this sort of thing than CBRD: http://www.cbrd.co.uk/histories/m23/ Unless it's www.pathetic.org.uk of course, but AFAICS he doesn't cover the "lost" M23 extension. Nick -- Serendipity: http://www.leverton.org/blosxom (last update 28th Sep 2007) "The Internet, an ersatz counterfeit of real life" -- Janet Street-Porter, BBC2, 19th March 1996 |
#4
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In message . com,
Boltar writes as the M23 originally supposed to have continued further north than it does now? Yes, it was to have continued as far as Balham, from where spurs would have connected it to the inner London Ringway ("London Motorway Box"). The only bits of the latter to be built were the sections either side of the Blackwall Tunnel, plus the tiny bit of (former) motorway from Westway down to the Shepherd's Bush roundabout: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...1960s_Plan.png Everything else was abandoned due to the cost and unacceptability of demolishing tens of thousands of properties. -- Paul Terry |
#5
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On Sat, 2007-09-29 at 09:12 +0100, Paul Terry wrote:
In message . com, Boltar writes as the M23 originally supposed to have continued further north than it does now? Yes, it was to have continued as far as Balham, from where spurs would have connected it to the inner London Ringway ("London Motorway Box"). In which case it really WOULD have become the 'Gateway to the South' |
#6
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On Sep 29, 5:18 pm, John Hearns wrote:
On Sat, 2007-09-29 at 09:12 +0100, Paul Terry wrote: In message . com, Boltar writes as the M23 originally supposed to have continued further north than it does now? Yes, it was to have continued as far as Balham, from where spurs would have connected it to the inner London Ringway ("London Motorway Box"). In which case it really WOULD have become the 'Gateway to the South' In the same vein, just before J8 on the Londonbound side of the M4, there's a curious bit where the roadside fence stops and it looks like there was some sort of exit at some point. Google Earth just shows a field beyond and a fairly new housing estate. It does however look as if something turned away from the motorway at some point in the past. Was it a contractors depot or similar? Neill |
#7
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In message 1191082728.8057.1.camel@Vigor13, John Hearns
writes On Sat, 2007-09-29 at 09:12 +0100, Paul Terry wrote: Yes, it was to have continued as far as Balham, from where spurs would have connected it to the inner London Ringway ("London Motorway Box"). In which case it really WOULD have become the 'Gateway to the South' LOL! Although I think Balham's grand vista of ever-changing lights (red, red and amber, green, amber and then red again) might have been a bit sub-optimal for a motorway. (According to the WIKI entry on Balham, "Gateway to the South" was an actual advertising slogan used by the Southern Railway in 1926 when the Northern Line tube station opened adjacent to their own station - but I find it hard to believe!). -- Paul Terry |
#8
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verbena wrote:
In the same vein, just before J8 on the Londonbound side of the M4, there's a curious bit where the roadside fence stops and it looks like there was some sort of exit at some point. Google Earth just shows a field beyond and a fairly new housing estate. It does however look as if something turned away from the motorway at some point in the past. Was it a contractors depot or similar? I think you're referring to the original J8 which was on the London side of the current J8/9. When the Maidenhead by-pass section of the M4 was constructed, there was a junction where the M4 crosses A308. The slip roads were on the London side of the A308 bridge, and led to T-junctions with A308, uncontrolled as far as I remember. Going west from here, the motorway then curved to the north-west and headed for Maidenhead Thicket with the intention of continuing westwards to the north of Reading. When it was decided to route the M4 south of Reading a new junction was needed between the Maidenhead Thicket route (now A404(M)) and the new alignment. When the junctions were numbered, the A308 junction became J8, the new junction was to be J9, and the two junctions on the Thicket route became J9a and J9b. However, it was then realised that J8 needed upgrading and was very close to the planned J9. The upgrading was achieved by building the A308(M) spur to a combined junction J8/9, and the old J8 was closed. You can still see the original curve of the M4 just to the north-east of the J8/9 roundabout. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#9
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On Sep 29, 7:59 pm, "Richard J." wrote:
You can still see the original curve of the M4 just to the north-east of the J8/9 roundabout. You can see it quite clearly in google earth, it looks quite green. Did they dig up the road surface or did they just let it return to nature on its own? If the latter it says a lot about how long our infrastructure wouldn't last if humanity suddenly vanished from the planet ![]() B2003 |
#10
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Boltar wrote:
On Sep 29, 7:59 pm, "Richard J." wrote: You can still see the original curve of the M4 just to the north-east of the J8/9 roundabout. You can see it quite clearly in google earth, it looks quite green. Did they dig up the road surface or did they just let it return to nature on its own? If the latter it says a lot about how long our infrastructure wouldn't last if humanity suddenly vanished from the planet ![]() I'm pretty sure they dug it up. There are, after all, hurriedly constructed runways on wartime airfields which are still there 60 years later. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
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