Europe South Asia Asia Pacific Americas Middle East Africa BBC Homepage World Service Education



Front Page

World

UK

UK Politics

Business

Sci/Tech

Health

Education

Sport

Entertainment

Talking Point

In Depth

On Air

Archive
Feedback
Low Graphics
Help

Friday, November 5, 1999 Published at 08:29 GMT


UK

M1 celebrates big 40

The original concrete M1 was resurfaced wtih tarmac

Motorists have marked the 40th birthday of the UK's long-distance motorway, the M1, by getting stuck in major traffic jams.

Congestion built up along many parts of the route in the south, the Midlands, Bedfordshire and Nottinghamshire.

"There have been some very long tailbacks indeed today and it's hardly a good way to mark the 40th anniversary," said RAC spokesman Rob Maynard.


The BBC's Jon Kay: "Road heralded a golden age of motoring"
The main route from London to Leeds was opened by Ernest Marples, minister for transport on 2 November 1959.

It was planned as the road of the century, a superhighway connecting north and south.

On its first day the motorway carried 13,000 vehicles - with some 100 cars breaking down along the way.


[ image: Then: Drivers warned not to picnic on the hard shoulder]
Then: Drivers warned not to picnic on the hard shoulder
In those days there were no speed limits and no MOT, and the rules of the motorway had to be drummed into drivers - who were warned against parking on the hard shoulder and having picnics.

"We had no streetlighting, no crash barriers on the motorway at all and no traffic really, only people coming along trying their cars out for speed," said Ray Maslin, a now retired police officer who worked on the M1.

The first 72-mile section from St Albans to Birmingham cost �28.5m and took 19 months to build, with one mile laid every eight days.

It was only designed to cope with 12,000 vehicles a day and was conceived as a freight route.

Now the 187-mile-long route carries one million vehicles a week, and an average of 88,000 vehicles a day.

Newport Pagnell was the M1's first service station - on its opening day it served just 50 lunches.

Now it pours 50,000 cups of tea a week and seven million people pass through the site every year.

Forty years on, congestion on the M1 has never been worse.

But the public transport-friendly policies of the current government mean the road is unlikely to see major investment.

Experts predict it will survive the next 40 years.

"I don't think the M1 is going to come to an end because there will still be substantial numbers of people who want to drive," said Professor Stuart Coles of the University of North London.

"The objective is to try and persuade a reasonable number of people not to use their cars but to use new modern forms of transport."



Advanced options | Search tips




Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage |


UK Contents

Northern Ireland
Scotland
Wales
England

Relevant Stories

26 Sep 99�|�UK
Transport guru calls for 'congestion charges'

25 Sep 99�|�UK Politics
Ministers urged to speed up transport reform

20 Jul 99�|�UK Politics
Need for transport 'quick fixes'

14 Jul 99�|�UK Politics
'Cash needed to avoid traffic chaos'





Internet Links


Department of Environment, Transport and the Regions


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.




In this section

Next steps for peace

Blairs' surprise over baby

Bowled over by Lord's

Beef row 'compromise' under fire

Hamilton 'would sell mother'

Industry misses new trains target

From Sport
Quins fightback shocks Cardiff

From Business
Vodafone takeover battle heats up

IRA ceasefire challenge rejected

Thousands celebrate Asian culture

From Sport
Christie could get two-year ban

From Entertainment
Colleagues remember Compo

Mother pleads for baby's return

Toys withdrawn in E.coli health scare

From Health
Nurses role set to expand

Israeli PM's plane in accident

More lottery cash for grassroots

Pro-lifers plan shock launch

Double killer gets life

From Health
Cold 'cure' comes one step closer

From UK Politics
Straw on trial over jury reform

Tatchell calls for rights probe into Mugabe

Ex-spy stays out in the cold

From UK Politics
Blair warns Livingstone

From Health
Smear equipment `misses cancers'

From Entertainment
Boyzone star gets in Christmas spirit

Fake bubbly warning

Murder jury hears dead girl's diary

From UK Politics
Germ warfare fiasco revealed

Blair babe triggers tabloid frenzy

Tourists shot by mistake

A new look for News Online