M2 motorway
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M2 motorway | |
Length | 25.7 miles 41.4 km |
Direction | West - East |
Start | Strood |
Primary destinations | Rochester Chatham Sittingbourne |
End | Faversham |
Construction dates | 1963 - 1965 |
Motorways joined | None |
The M2 is a motorway in Kent, England. It is 25.7 miles (41.4 km) long and acts as a bypass of the section of the A2 road which runs through the Medway Towns, Sittingbourne and Faversham. It is the only "M" motorway (as opposed to an "A-road(M)" motorway such as the A1(M)) that does not meet any other motorway at a junction (whilst the M57 and M67 do not connect to other motorways directly, they do meet other motorways at junctions which briefly require the motorist to use all-purpose roads to get from one to the other).
The M2 is also the longest motorway not to go past any primary destinations (westbound it is signed "London", eastbound "Canterbury, Channel Tunnel, Dover", none of which are anywhere near the M2 itself).
Contents |
[edit] Route
The M2 starts to the west of Strood, diverging southeastwards from the A2 road that heads eastwards from London. It begins at junction 1 with four lanes. It then drops down into the Medway Valley, running parallel to the Channel Tunnel Rail Link, passes to the south of Rochester at junction 2, and crosses the River Medway on the Medway Viaduct. It then diverges from the Channel Tunnel Rail Link, climbs up Nashenden Valley to Blue Bell Hill and on to the North Downs on a split-level carriageway and meets junction 3 at Walderslade, south of Chatham. Here the road narrows to three lanes, and runs northeast across Crossington Fields, Westfield Sole, Lidsing, and Bredhurst towards junction 4, where it becomes two lanes. Continuing east, passing Medway Service Station, it crosses the A249 over the Stockbury Viaduct at junction 5. It then continues along the rural North Downs, with a connection to the old A2 at Faversham. Shortly after this, it terminates at junction 7, allowing traffic to continue on either the A299 towards Thanet or the A2 towards Canterbury and Dover.
[edit] History
[edit] Original Construction
The M2 was constructed in the 1960s, with the Medway bypass being constructed in 1963 and the rest in 1965. It was opened in stages[1]:
- Junction 1 to 2 in 1965
- Junction 2 to 5 in 1963
- Junction 5 to 7 in 1965
It was planned to extend the road to London and Dover, making the M2 the main route between London and the channel ports, but this extension never materialised. The M2 was originally to be designated as the A2(M), but due to the Daily Telegraph reporting it as the M2, the Ministry of Transport changed the designation [2].
[edit] Junction Amendments
The M2 stayed much the same until the 1990s. Traffic using it decreased when the M20 was completed from London to Folkestone in 1991, and the M2 merely remains a bypass for the Medway Towns. Junction 1 was altered when the A289 Wainscott Northern bypass was built in the late 1990s.
[edit] Widening
The M2 was still busy between Junctions 1 and 4 though, and in 2000 work began on upgrading the 2-lane M2 to 4-lanes. A joint venture between Costain, Skanska and Mowlem (CSM) created the company that would undertake the project. The project required the redesign of Junction 2 and Junction 3, and a second Medway Bridge. The existing bridge was converted to a 4-lane, eastbound carriageway (including a hard shoulder). The new bridge formed the westbound carriageway. The entire stretch was lit with streetlights (the old section was not lit). The old Medway Bridge was physically narrowed by removing part of the footpath that was a feature on it. High-pressure water cutting equipment was used to cut the concrete into manageable sections for disposal although, the footpaths were not lost on either side, there is only one path open to public now.
Spoil from the North Downs Tunnel was used to from the new embankment for the London bound traffic between J2 and the Nashenden Valley.
The widening was completed in July 2003[3].
[edit] Junctions
M2 Motorway | ||
Westbound exits | Junction | Eastbound exits |
Road continues as A2 to London | J1 | Rochester A2 Gillingham, Grain A289 |
Grain, Rochester A289 | Start of Motorway | |
Rochester, West Malling A228 | J2 | Rochester, West Malling A228 |
Maidstone, Chatham, Rochester A229 | J3 | Maidstone, Chatham A229 Channel Tunnel (M20) |
Gillingham A278 | J4 | Gillingham A278 |
Medway Services | ||
Maidstone, Sheerness A249 The WEST (M20, M25) |
J5 | Maidstone, Sittingbourne, Sheerness A249 |
Faversham, Ashford A251 | J6 | Faversham, Ashford A251 |
Start of Motorway | J7 | Canterbury, Dover, Channel Tunnel A2 |
Canterbury, Channel Tunnel, Dover, Faversham A2 |
Road continues as A299 to Ramsgate |
[edit] Trivia
The Channel Tunnel Rail Link also crosses the River Medway on its own bridge right next to the M2. This work was finished in 2003.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Motorway Database - M2 Timeline. CBRD. Retrieved on January 27, 2007.
- ^ Copy of Civili Service minute. Pathetic Motorways. Retrieved on January 27, 2007.
- ^ Route Management Stratergy - A2/M2/A249. Highways Agency. Retrieved on January 27, 2007.
[edit] External links
- CBRD
- Photographs of the Medway Viaduct From Its Public Footpath
- Photographs of the M2 between Junctions 5 and 7
- The Motorway Archive - M2
Motorways in the United Kingdom | ||
Great Britain: M1 • M2 • M3 • M4 • M5 • M6 • M6 Toll • M8 • M9 • M10 • M11 • M18 • M20 • M23 • M25 • M26 • M27 • M32 • M40 • M42 • M45 • M48 • M49 • M50 • M53 • M54 • M55 • M56 • M57 • M58 • M60 • M61 • M62 • M65 • M66 • M67 • M69 • M73 • M74 • M77 • M80 • M90 • M180 • M181 • M271 • M275 • M602 • M606 • M621 • M876 • M898 | ||
A1(M) • A3(M) • A38(M) • A48(M) • A57(M) • A58(M) • A64(M) • A66(M) • A74(M) • A167(M) • A194(M) • A308(M) • A329(M) • A404(M) • A601(M) • A627(M) • A823(M) | ||
Northern Ireland: M1 • M2 • M3 • M5 • M12 • M22 • A8(M) | edit | |
Past: M16 • M41 • M63 • A18(M) • A40(M) • A41(M) • A102(M) • A6144(M) Unbuilt: M12 • M13 • M15 • M31 • M64 Future: M4 Toll |