London Gateway services

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London Gateway Services
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The main building
County Greater London
Road M1
Coordinates 51°37′52″N 0°15′50″W / 51.631°N 0.264°W / 51.631; -0.264Coordinates: 51°37′52″N 0°15′50″W / 51.631°N 0.264°W / 51.631; -0.264
Operator Welcome Break
Previous name(s) Scratchwood Services
Date opened 1969
Website Welcome Break
London Gateway services (Greater London)

London Gateway services is the southern-most motorway service station on the M1 motorway, located between Junctions 2 and 4 north of London, England.

It opened in 1969, being run by Forte, and was opened as Scratchwood services. It is built adjacent to the site of the proposed junction 3 of the M1 with a spur to the A1. This link was never built and the intended roundabout junction was not completed, instead being adapted to provide access to the service area. However traffic therefore travels the "wrong way" around the junction, with some sharp turns on the slip roads.

On 6 September 1997, large numbers of people came to the service station to witness the passing of the funeral hearse of Diana, Princess of Wales[1] on its way along the M1 from central London to her burial place in Althorp, Northamptonshire.

A reserved section of current service area is a major long-distance coach service interchange.

The guns in both forward turrets on the museum ship HMS Belfast, some 11.7 miles away in the centre of London, are trained and elevated on the London Gateway Motorway Services Area.[2]

References

  1. "Trivia". 
  2. Imperial War Museum - HMS Belfast

External links

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