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The M25 motorway looking south between junctions 14 and 15, near Heathrow Airport. Taken on Sunday April 25th 2004 at 5 pm. (The
red light from the overhead gantry, just visible in the distance, is the MIDAS system indicating a reduced speed limit due to
congestion.)
The M25 motorway is one of the UK's motorways. It is the orbital
motorway which encircles London. It is
approximately 117 miles in circumference.
It is for the most part a three-laned motorway although there are a few stretches which are two-laned and a few (seemingly
shorter) stretches which are four-laned. It is thought to be Europe's busiest motorway:
an estimated 200,000 vehicles a day make use of it, up from 100,000 a day in 1987.
The M25 is not circular since to the east of London for the toll crossing of the
Thames between Thurrock and Dartford is renumbered the A282. The Dartford Crossing, which consists of two tunnels and a bridge, is also named Canterbury Way.
Also, at junction 5 near Sevenoaks, to continue around the M25 requires the
driver to take an off-ramp as the M25 along the south of London continues east (without a way off) as the M26 and on to the M20. From
the north the road straight on becomes the A21 towards the south coast.
The M25's name inspired the name of the electronica duo, Orbital although a pre-cursor of the M25 was the North Orbital
road.
The idea of an orbital road around London was first proposed early in the 20th century, through the Lutyens and Bressey plans
of 1937 to the Abercrombie Plan of 1945 which proposed a series of
five individual roads around the capital. Over time successive governments reduced this grandiose scheme to the Greater London
Development Plan - a combination of two rings into one, the M25, and a smaller inner ring, initially hoped to become the M15, but
currently still the A406.
The stretch of M25 between junctions 24 and 25 (Potters Bar to Waltham Cross)
The entire orbital was constructed in a number of stages from around 1975 up until 1985. The sections were not constructed
contiguously but in small sections, such as Dartford to Swanley (Junction 1 to Junction 3) or Potters Bar to Waltham Cross (J24 to J25), and later joined. Each section was presented to planning authorities in its own
right and was individually justified; there were almost forty public inquiries relating to sections of the route. Maps at this
time depicting the short sections named the route as the M16 but this changed prior to completion.
The M25 was officially opened in October, 1986 with a ceremony by Margaret Thatcher opening the section between Junctions 22 and 23 (London Colney and South Mimms).
More recently, the perenially congested south-western stretch of the M25 (near Woking) was fitted with an experimental automated traffic control system called MIDAS (Motorway Incident Detection
and Automatic Signalling). This consists of a distributed network of traffic and weather sensors, speed cameras and variable speed signs which control traffic speeds with little human supervision. The
system successfully reduced congestion and it is hoped that MIDAS will be fitted to the rest of the M25 in due course.
The M25 is known for its frequent jams. These have been the subject of so much comment from such an early stage that even at
the official opening ceremony Margaret Thatcher complained about "those who carp and criticise". The jams have inspired jokes
("the world's biggest car park"), songs (Chris Rea's "The Road to Hell") and the following tongue-in-cheek theory:
- "Many phenomena - wars, plagues, sudden audits - have been advanced as evidence for the hidden hand of Satan in the affairs of Man, but whenever students of demonology get together the M25 London orbital motorway
is generally agreed to be among the top contenders for exhibit A." -- from Good Omens, by Terry Pratchett and Neil
Gaiman.
See Also
References
- Iain Sinclair, London Orbital: A Walk Around the M25, 2002,
Granta Books, ISBN 1862075476
External Link
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