A2 road (Northern Ireland)

Not to be confused with A2 road (Great Britain).

Coordinates: 54°40′55″N 5°52′48″W / 54.682°N 5.880°W / 54.682; -5.880

A2 road shield

A2 road
Route information
Length: 239 mi (385 km)
Major junctions
South end: Newry, County Down
  A1 in Newry
A24 in Clough
 Strangford Lough
M3, M2 and A12 Westlink in Belfast
M5 near Newtownabbey
A26 in Coleraine
A5
A40
A515 and A6 in Londonderry
North end: At border crossing near Muff, County Donegal and Culmore, County Londonderry and Bridgend, County Donegal.
Location
Primary
destinations
:
Newry
Warrenpoint
Kilkeel
Newcastle
Strangford
Portaferry
Donaghadee
Bangor
Holywood
Belfast
Greenisland
Carrickfergus
Whitehead
Larne
Carnlough
Ballycastle
Bushmills
Portrush
Portstewart
Coleraine
Limavady
Derry
Letterkenny
Road network
The A2 coastal route shown in red from Derry to Newry.

The A2 is a major road in Northern Ireland, a considerable length of which is often referred to the Antrim Coast Road because much of it follows the scenic coastline of County Antrim; other parts of the road follow the coasts in Counties Down and Londonderry.

Mainly a single lane in each direction, the road follows most of the coastline of Northern Ireland. It is connected in several places to other major roads.

The Causeway Coast

Route

The road begins in the city of Newry, County Down and heads North-East through the fishing towns of Warrenpoint, Rostrevor and Kilkeel.

After Dundrum the road continues via Ardglass to Strangford, where traffic wishing to stick to this route can take a car ferry to Portaferry. From there it meets the Irish Sea coast of the Ards Peninsula at Cloughey, and follows it through Portavogie, Ballyhalbert, Millisle and Donaghadee to Bangor, County Down, from where it becomes a major dual carriageway leading to Belfast.

After its intersection with the M3, it continues through Belfast City Centre's complex one-way system via the Queen's Bridge and Queen Elizabeth II Bridge, past the Custom House and on along Corporation Street, eventually joining York Road. Along this stretch and further out the Shore Road, the main route runs along the line of the M2 and M5, to a point where the M5 ends in Newtownabbey in the northern suburbs of Belfast.

After a suburban stretch through Jordanstown, Greenisland, Carrickfergus, Eden and Whitehead, the road enters open countryside on its way to Larne, where the most noteworthy section of the road, the Antrim Coast Road, begins (see below).

After winding round the eastern coast from Larne to Cushendall the road continues along the north coast to Ballycastle before travelling along the Giant's Causeway Coast to Portrush and on through Coleraine and Derry to the border with the Republic of Ireland, where it becomes the N13 and proceeds as far as Letterkenny in County Donegal. Another section finishes at Culmore, County Londonderry and Muff, County Donegal.

Where it approaches Derry City the A2 is a dual carriageway from City of Derry Airport to The Foyle Bridge (Ireland's Longest Bridge).

Antrim Coast Road

The Blackcave Tunnel or "Black Arch" at the start of the Antrim Coast Road at the northern edge of Larne.
The "White Arch" at Waterfoot. It is the pier of a bridge built in 1873 for the Glenariff Iron Ore and Harbour Company as part of Ireland's first 3 ft (914 mm) gauge railway.

The Antrim Coast Road is regarded as one of the great tourist routes of the world.[1] This part of the road has seen a dramatic increase in traffic in recent years (in particular during warmer weather). It runs along the coast for about 25 miles (40 kilometres), from the Black Arch near Larne to the Red Arch near Cushendall, passing through the villages of Ballygalley, Glenarm, Carnlough and Waterfoot. Motorists, cyclists and pedestrians should pay due care and attention as there are currently no cycle lanes and footpaths are infrequent.

Early in the 19th century, in the reign of William IV, the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland reported that the Glens of Antrim were "cut off from any reasonable communication by the badness of roads over mountains and slopes varying from 1 in 6 to 1 in 12". The Commissioners conceived a great project to build the Antrim Coast Road to give better access for the inhabitants, open up the Glens for trade, and give a form of unemployment relief.[2]

The Antrim Coast Road was promoted by the Commissioners, but it was their civil engineer, William Bald, who had the vision of building the road along the foot of the cliffs. He did so between 1832 and 1842, supervised by the County Surveyors of the day – Thomas Woodhouse (1832–1836) and Charles Lanyon (1836–1842).[3]

It was a great achievement for its day and made a great difference to the people of the Glens. Before the road was built they sailed across the North Channel to Scotland to trade their goods, because the short sea crossing was easier than travel by land to the nearest market town.

William Bald had the vision of building the road along the foot of the cliffs, some of them over 330 feet (101 m) high. This was a novel idea, as previous plans had been to build the road some distance inland. But this would have meant steep gradients as the road traversed the valleys of the Glens as they ran down from the Antrim Plateau to the sea. Bald decided to blast the cliff face which then fell down onto the foreshore to form the base for the new road.

In his report to the Commissioners[4] Bald stated:

"30,0000 cubic yards of rock have been hurled down on the shore almost entirely by blasting, which has been executed by care and judgement. This has been greatly assisted by the use of Beckford's Patent Safety fuse, an invention of the greatest certainty and economy which reduces, in a great degree, the chance of those accidents to which the operation of the miners has been particularly liable."

The Antrim Coast Road was completed in 1842 at a cost of £37,140 – some £12,000 over budget – much to the displeasure of the Commissioners. It then remained largely unchanged until the late 1960s. But there were frequent rockfalls because the geology of the Antrim Coast is Ulster White Limestone, greatly faulted and fissured, which bears a considerable overburden of basalt, also weathered and rotten near the surface.

In February 1967 there was a major fall of rock onto the road south of Glenarm, and in May 1967 there was another which completely blocked the road.[5] At this point the cliffs are about 330 feet (101 m) high so Antrim County Council decided to build a new road 100 feet (30 m) on the seaward side of the old one. The Council did the work largely by direct labour and started to acquire the plant and equipment needed for the job. The council opened a quarry and began to build a new embankment, but on the night of 31 October 1968 there was a one in 70-year storm that washed away the part of the causeway that had not yet been protected by rock armour. The work resumed in 1969 and a reinforced concrete sea wall was built, again by direct labour. Altogether 97,000 tonnes of rock armour were placed and the scheme was completed in November 1970, over three years after the road was closed.

William Bald was a civil engineer who left a great legacy to the people of the Glens of Antrim, and created one of the finest tourist routes in the World. But despite extensive research no portrait of him can be found.

Bald has two memorials. The first is a small plaque on the road just north of Larne. A second memorial was erected in August 2008 in Burntisland by the Institution of Civil Engineers and the Burntisland Heritage Trust.[6]

Ian Paisley, the long-standing Member of Parliament for North Antrim, called the road "one of the most beautiful in the whole of the United Kingdom".[7]

Tourist attractions

Owing to its length and the fact that it follows the coast, the road passes a large number of Northern Ireland's tourist attractions. These include:


References

  1. Orr, David (May 2010). "The Antrim Coast Road – a civil engineering legacy". Proceedings – Engineering History and Heritage – Issue EH2 (London: Institution of Civil Engineers): 68.
  2. David Orr. Presidential Address to the Institution of Civil Engineers: 'At the Heart of Society', 2007
  3. Storrie, Margaret C (1971). "The Man Who Built the Antrim Coast Road". Geographical Magazine (London): not cited.
  4. Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland (1834). Annual Report. London: The House of Commons. p. not cited.
  5. Turner, Malcolm (1972). Reconstructing the Antrim Coast Road. Belfast: Institution of Civil Engineers Northern Ireland Region. p. not cited.
  6. Burntisland Heritage Trust, 2008
  7. Paisley, Ian (5 December 1972). "Northern Ireland (tourism)". Hansard. Retrieved 6 March 2015.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to A2 road (Northern Ireland).
Wikimedia Commons has media related to A2 (Antrim Coast Road).

Route map: Bing / Google

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