West Cross Route
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The West Cross Route is a short, 0.75 mile dual carriageway section of the A3220 route in central London. The road runs north-south between the northern elevated roundabout junction with the western end of the Westway (A40), and the southern Holland Park Roundabout. The road opened in 1970 together with the Westway.
The West Cross Route was formerly numbered as the M41 motorway. Its status was downgraded to an A-road in 2000 when responsibility for trunk roads in Greater London was transferred from the Highways Agency to the Greater London Authority.
Approximately half-way along the road's length, a new junction has been built to serve the "WhiteCity"/"Westfield London" shopping development currently under construction.
West Cross Route (WCR) was originally the designation for the western section of Ringway 1, the innermost circuit of the London Ringways network, a complex and comprehensive plan for a network of high speed roads circling and radiating out from central London designed to manage and control the flow of traffic within the capital. The road would have run from Battersea to Harlesden and would have paralleled the National Rail West London Line as an elevated road above the streets of London.
[edit] Context
- See London Ringways for a detailed history
The WCR and the other roads planned in the 1960s for central London had developed from early schemes prior to the Second World War through Sir Patrick Abercrombie's County of London Plan, 1943 and Greater London Plan, 1944 to a 1960s Greater London Council (GLC) scheme that would have involved the construction of many miles of motorway standard roads across the city and demolition on a massive scale. Due to the huge construction costs and widespread public opposition, most of the scheme was cancelled in 1973 and the WCR and Westway as well as the East Cross Route in east London were the only significant parts to be built.
At the road's northern end, the entry and exit ramps to and from the elevated roundabout with the Westway would have been, had the road been built in full, slip roads with the main route continuing north beneath the roundabout into North Kensington and on to the junction with the North Cross Route at Harlesden. The alignment of the slip roads leave a wide space between for the unbuilt carriageway. On the north side of the roundabout, two short stubs indicate the starting point of the slip roads that would have been provided for traffic joining or leaving the northern section of the WCR.
South of the Holland Park roundabout, which the WCR would have passed above on a flyover, the route would have continued along the alignment of the West London Line passing over Kensington (Olympia) station to a westbound only interchange with the A4 at Talgarth Road. It would then have been elevated over Earls Court Exhibition Centre, skirted the western edge of Brompton Cemetery, and passed by Stamford Bridge stadium before an eastbound only interchange along Lots Road to meet Cheyne Walk. Next the WCR would have crossed the River Thames on a new bridge and entered Battersea where it would have had a junction with the South Cross Route.
[edit] External links
- CBRD.co.uk West Cross Route
- Motorway Archive - A40(M) Westway and M41 West Cross Route
- Pathetic Motorways
- Google Maps - Aerial view of the roundabout at the north end of the West Cross Route showing the two slip road stubs
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