M3 Motorway

In Ireland, the 'M3 motorway' is a planned upgrade to part of the N3 road from Dublin to Cavan and the Northwest.
The M3 motorway links West London (junction 1 at Sunbury) to Southampton and the M27 (junction 14). It crosses the M25 at junction 2. There are 3 lanes in each direction for the majority of the length of the motorway. The most notable towns on the route are Camberley, Farnborough, Fleet, Hook, Basingstoke, Winchester and Eastleigh.

Junctions

Construction and History

(Not in date order)
  • Junction 1 to Junction 3 opened in 1974.
  • Junction 3 to junction 4 opened in 1971.
  • Junction 4 to Junction 8 opened in 1971.
  • Junction 8 to Junction 10 opened in 1985.
  • Junction 10 to Junction 11 opened in 1995.
  • Junction 11 to Junction 14 opened in 1967.
Junction 11 to Junction 14 was originally a dual carriageway. This was upgraded to three lanes in 1991 then upgraded to a Motorway in 1995. The southern end of the M3 originally only connected to the A27 / A33 roundabout. Westbound connections to the M27 were added in 1975 and eastbound connections were added in 1984. The motorway was built to relieve traffic from the old A30 and A33, the congested single carriageway trunk roads that traffic between the cities previously used.

Tywford Down

The Ministry of Transport (MoT) had trouble purchasing the land required to bypass Winchester. The land they wanted, on Twyford Down, east of the city, was owned by Winchester College, who refused to sell the land to the government because it was an important chalk grassland habitat. The government did not wish to issue compulsory purchase because they were on good terms with the college and did not want to sever ties. Proposals were made for a tunnel through Twyford Down, but because the estimated cost for this was 75 million more than the estimated cost for a cutting the government dismissed the plans. In 1990 a link between Southampton and the southern end of Twyford Down was completed and soon after work began on clearing the route across the down. Environmentalists, including the Dongas, gathered on the down making a camp to hinder work. A coalition of locals, and environmental organisations including Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth took the MoT to the high court stating that the road was against the government's own environmental protection laws. The case failed, but European Union minister for the Environment, Carlo Ripa de Meana looked into the case and ordered the project to stop because it violated British and EU laws. The MoT ignored this order, and when it took over the EU chairmanship later that year Carlo Ripa de Meana lost his job. The project was held up further as scientists and archaeologists worked hard to minimise the destruction caused by the project. In 1994 the link was completed, cutting an average of 5 minutes off the London to Southampton journey time.

See also

External links

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