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M2 motorway (Great Britain)

Route map:
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

M2 shield
M2
MapM2 highlighted in blue

Shown with UK motorway network
NashendenValley5500.JPG
The motorway crossing the River Medway next to the High Speed 1 railway line.
Route information
Maintained by National Highways
Existed1963–present
History
  • J2–J5 was opened in 1963.
  • J1–J2 and J5–J7 were opened in 1965.
Major junctions
West endStrood
East endFaversham
Location
CountryUnited Kingdom
CountiesKent
Road network
M1 M3

The M2 is a 26-mile-long (42 km) long motorway in Kent, England, and was built to bypass a section of the A2 road in Kent, which goes through the Medway Towns, Sittingbourne, and Faversham. It provides an alternative route to the Port of Dover, which supplements the M20 motorway located further to the south. The terminal junctions of the M2 intersect with the A2, which come together to form a 62-mile-long (100 km) long trunk road from London to Dover.[1]

Route

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The M2 starts west of Strood, diverging towards the southeast away from the A2 road. Between J1 and J2, the M2 is four lanes in width, and slopes down into the Medway Valley south of Rochester. J2 is located to the northwest of the left bank of the River Medway, linking the A228 road to the M2, which runs between Strood and West Malling. The junction is in a dumbbell configuration, with a short spur of the A228 providing access to the junction. The M2 drops to three lanes throughout the junction, but returns to a width of four lanes after the junction.

After J2, the motorway passes over the wide Medway Valley via the Medway Viaducts alongside HS1, with the North Downs Way running alongside the eastbound carriageway of the M2 here. It passes over the Medway Valley railway and the aforementioned river. After the viaduct, the M2 runs past the Wouldham marshes and the suburbs of the Medway Towns, which include Borstal, which is well renowned for being the village where HM Prison Rochester is located, and which lends its generic name to institutions for young offenders.

Prior to J3, the M2 ascends a steep valley up to Blue Bell Hill, with the two carriageways on different levels. At J3, the carriageways of the M2 return to the same level and the motorway meets the A229 road, which serves Maidstone) and Walderslade. The junction is in a unique configuration, whereby the M2 and A229 are linked by two grade-separated roundabouts, with the M2 reducing to a width of three lanes after the junction.

As the M2 continues to pass the Medway Towns, it runs along the northern escarpment of the North Downs, and goes past Lidsing and Bredhurst towards J4, where it meets the A278 road at a more conventional grade-separated roundabout junction, reducing to a width of two lanes afterwards.

After J4, traffic on the M2 is able to access a motorway service area named the Medway services, which leads up to J5 a few miles east of the services, where the M2 intersects with the A249 road, which serves Sittingbourne, Sheerness and Maidstone. The junction is in an unconventional grade-separated roundabout configuration, where the slip roads which lead to and from the M2 and roundabout are looped due to the considerable height of the viaduct which the M2 passes over the junction on. Since 2022 the Department of Transport has been undertaking a major reconstruction of the junction due for completion by Winter 2024.

After J5, the M2 runs for ten miles along the gentle lower slopes of the North Downs as it nears the coast. At J6, the M2 intersects with the A251 road, which serves Faversham one mile to the north and the town of Ashford 13 miles south. The junction is in a parclo configuration. After J6, the M2 ends at J7, which is another conventional grade-separated roundabout. The M2 splits into two lanes prior to ending at J7, with lane 1 heading onto the main roundabout rejoining the A2, which continues onwards to Canterbury (8 miles; 13 km) and Dover (23 miles; 37 km), and lane 2 feeding onto the A299 road, commonly known as the Thanet Way, which continues onwards to Whitstable (6 miles; 10 km), Herne Bay (10 miles; 16 km), Margate (23 miles; 37 km) and Ramsgate (27 miles; 43 km).

History

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Original construction

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Junction 2 of the M2, the roundabout on the A228, showing the motorway crossing the Medway and climbing up the Nashenden Valley. Alongside is High Speed 1.
Junction 5 of the M2
The widened section approaching the lane drop at junction 4

The initial section of the M2 between J2 and J5 was opened by the then Transport Minister Ernest Marples on 29 May 1963,[2] and the remainder of the M2 (J1–J2 and J5–J7) was opened in 1965.[3] It was initially referred to as the Medway Towns Motor Road[4] when it was opened, but has been referred to by different names in some official sources.[5]

Planned extension

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It was planned to extend the M2 to London and Dover, which would have made it the main route between London and the Channel Ports, but this extension never materialised due to a lack of traffic demand.[6] Instead, the A2 was mostly dualled and improved from Brenley Corner to Dover, with separate improvements being carried out on the A2 between London and Strood.[7][8]

The subsequent Strood to Swanscombe dualling, towards London, of the improved A2, was constructed from 1 June 1964, being seven miles, with a contract of £4,436,869 given to A. Monk Ltd of Padgate, near Warrington; it replaced a single-carriageway three-lane road. Each carriageway had three lanes, with hard shoulders (hardened verge), with four grade-separated junctions.[9] Leonard Fairclough & Son constructed the bridges.[10] The new dual three-lane A2 section was opened at noon on Friday 29 July 1966, with the Bishop of Rochester, David Say, who said a prayer, and George Harris, the managing director of Monk Ltd.[11][12]

Numbering

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During planning, the number assigned for the route was the A2(M). However, a Daily Telegraph article published on 15 December 1959 erroneously referred to the route as the M2 rather than the A2(M), a number that had been reserved for a route between London and the Channel Ports. After the article was published, the Ministry of Transport assigned the M2 number to the route, while a new number, the M20 was reserved for a route between London and the Channel Ports.[13]

J1 improvements

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Aside from retrofitting the central crash barriers along the M2, as happened with all early motorways in the UK, the M2 did not change significantly until the 1990s, when the construction of the A289 road to the north of J1 resulted in J1 being reconfigured from a fork configuration to a fork-trumpet hybrid.[14]

Service area

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The M2 opened with a single service area between junctions 4 and 5, named Farthing Corner services and operated by Top Rank.[15] Today the services are known as Medway services.[16]

The services have an access road to the local network for service and delivery vehicles that is not, as with some motorway service areas, restricted with a gate or barrier.[17] This has led to local businesses using the services as an unofficial exit from the motorway.[18]

Widening

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While traffic using the M2 decreased when the M20 motorway was completed from London to Folkestone in May 1991,[19] traffic heading into North Kent remained, and congestion along the route was increasing, primarily due to heavy goods vehicles blocking the outside lane.[20] This led to work beginning in 2000 on widening the M2 from two lanes to four lanes between J1 and J3, and three lanes between J3 and J4. A joint venture between Costain, Skanska and Mowlem (CSM) created the company which would complete the project, which required the redesign of J2 and J3, and the construction of a new viaduct next to the existing one over the Medway Valley. The existing viaduct was converted to the four-lane eastbound carriageway of the M2 seen today, with the new viaduct forming the westbound carriageway. High-pressure-water cutting equipment being used to cut concrete into manageable sections for disposal where necessary. The entire stretch was lit with streetlights in contrast to the previously unlit M2. Spoil from the North Downs Tunnel was used to form the new embankment for the westbound carriageway between J2 and the Nashenden Valley. The project was completed in July 2003.[21]

J5 improvements

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From September 2021, National Highways are carrying out improvements to J5 of the M2, which will involve the construction of a new flyover for A249 traffic heading through the junction and new slip-road connections between the M2 and the A249.[22] Works to realign the slip roads leading from the A249 to the eastbound carriageway were completed in January 2023.[23] New local road links are also being built as part of the scheme. The entire scheme is scheduled for completion in winter 2024.[24]

Junctions

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County Location mi km Junction Destinations Notes
Kent Strood 27.0
27.5
43.4
44.3
1[coord 1] A2  - London, Dartford Crossing

A289  - Gillingham

Road continues West as A2 to London
28.8
29.0
46.3
46.6
2[coord 2] A228  - Rochester, West Malling
Chatham 32.6
32.8
52.4
52.8
3[coord 3] A229  - Chatham, Rochester, Maidstone
Gillingham 36.4
36.5
58.5
58.8
4[coord 4] A278  - Gillingham
Rainham Services[coord 5] Medway services
Stockbury 40.4
40.3
64.4
64.9
5[coord 6] A249  - Sittingbourne, Maidstone, Sheerness
Faversham 50.6
50.8
81.5
81.8
6[coord 7] A251  - Faversham, Ashford
52.3
52.6
84.2
84.7
7[coord 8] A2  - Canterbury, Dover, Channel Tunnel

A299  - Margate, Ramsgate

Road continues as A299 to Ramsgate
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Notes

  • Distances in kilometres and carriageway identifiers are obtained from driver location signs/location marker posts. Where a junction spans several hundred metres and the data is available, both the start and finish values for the junction are shown.
  • Coordinate data from ACME Mapper.
Coordinate list

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "M2 and A2". Roads.org.uk. Retrieved 12 October 2020.
  2. ^ "Golden anniversary for the M2". Highways Agency. Archived from the original on 31 August 2013. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  3. ^ "Motorway Database – M2 Timeline". CBRD. Archived from the original on 12 February 2007. Retrieved 27 January 2007.
  4. ^ M2 Motorway roads.org.uk
  5. ^ "Ramsgate (Direction Signs) - Hansard - UK Parliament".
  6. ^ Heseltine, Michael (15 July 1970). "M2, Dover". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Retrieved 18 September 2012.
  7. ^ Heseltine, Michael (15 July 1970). "M2 Motorway (Brenley Corner – Dover)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  8. ^ Heseltine, Michael (16 December 1970). "M2 Motorway (Extension)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  9. ^ Tonbridge Free Press Friday 24 April 1964, page 5
  10. ^ Birmingham Daily Post Thursday 6 May 1965, page 26
  11. ^ Kent Messenger Friday 29 July 1966, page 2
  12. ^ Kent Messenger Friday 5 August 1966, page 8
  13. ^ "Motorway Database » M2". roads.org.uk. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  14. ^ "New Road Schemes". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 21 October 2002. Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  15. ^ "Motorways (catering facilities)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 17 February 1964. Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  16. ^ Chatterton, Mark (15 August 2022). Britain's Motorways. Amberley Publishing Limited. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-3981-1117-2.
  17. ^ "Google Maps: Medway Services (Streetview)". Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  18. ^ "Directions to Hartlip Place". 2008. Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  19. ^ "Road Schemes". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 16 October 1995. Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  20. ^ Clarke, Kenneth (22 July 1980). "M2 (Heavy Vehicles)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  21. ^ "Route Description – A2/M2 and A249 (M2 to Sheppey)". Highways Agency. Archived from the original on 26 September 2006. Retrieved 27 January 2007.
  22. ^ "M2 junction 5 improvements - National Highways". 11 May 2020.
  23. ^ "Slip road reopens after four-month closure". 30 January 2023.
  24. ^ "M2 junction 5 improvements". National Highways. Retrieved 23 September 2023.
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Geographic data related to M2 motorway at OpenStreetMap

KML is from Wikidata