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Leeds Inner Ring Road





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(Redirected from A58(M) motorway)
 


The Leeds Inner Ring Road is part-motorway and part-A roadsinLeeds, West Yorkshire, England, which forms a ring road around the city centre. It has six different road numbers that are all sections of longer roads. Clockwise, the roads are the A58(M), a motorway section of the A58 road; the A64(M), part of the A64 road; the A61 between York Road and the M621; the M621 between junctions 4 and 2; and the A643 between the M621 and A58. The motorway section is in total is 2.5 miles (4.0 km) long and is subject to a 40 miles per hour (64 km/h) speed limit throughout.

A64(M) shield

A64(M)

Route information

Length

0.5 mi (800 m)

Existed

1969–present

Major junctions

East end

Quarry Hill

Major intersections

West end

Brunswick

Location

Country

United Kingdom

Constituent country

England

Primary
destinations

Leeds

Road network

A58(M)

A66(M)

A58(M) shield

A58(M)

Route information

Length

2.0 mi (3.2 km)

Existed

1964–present

History

Constructed 1964–75

Major junctions

East end

Brunswick

Major intersections

West end

Armley

Location

Country

United Kingdom

Constituent country

England

Primary
destinations

Leeds

Road network

A57(M)

A64(M)

By the Leeds International Pool.
Passing under the Nuffield Hospital.
Passing under the Woodhouse Lane multi-story car park.
Signs on the John Smeaton Viaduct

Route

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The motorway section of the ring road forms a semicircle around the north of the city centre. It is classified as a motorway to prohibit certain types of traffic and pedestrians but is not designed to modern motorway standards: it has no hard shoulders and many exits are unsuitable for a true motorway, including a right-side (fast lane) slip road exit. Most of it runs in a concrete-walled cutting, but it goes into a tunnel under the Leeds General Infirmary. The motorway cuts through inner-city neighbourhoods such as Woodhouse, Sheepscar, and Buslingthorpe, forming an important link in the road network by allowing traffic from the A65, A660, A58, A61 and A64 to bypass the city centre.

History

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Leeds suffered severe traffic congestion as it was on the main route joining Liverpool, Manchester, Bradford and Hull.[1] In 1955 it was decided to build a dual carriageway to remove through traffic.[2] In the final stages before construction began the road was redesignated as a motorway in 1963, without any changes to the design.[2] Construction began with the demolition of 365 homes and 174 other structures.[3]

The motorway was built around the city centre in three stages in the 1960s and 1970s.[4] Stage 1 opened was the route from the exit for the town hall to the A58 exit, stage 2 was the A64(M) section and stage 3 linked the road to the A58.[5] Stages 4 to 6 featured upgrades to the A61 constructed in the 1990s to non-motorway standards featuring traffic light controlled intersections and non-grade separated junctions. When the motorway finally opened, Leeds used the motto Motorway city of the 70s.

The final stage of the inner ring road (stage 7) began construction in 2006 and opened in late 2008. Featuring a large elevated viaduct, it links the M621 at junction 4 with the previously-constructed traffic light controlled interchange at Cross Green, Leeds is of a similar standard to stages 4–6.[6]

The remainder of the Inner Ring Road is formed by using the M621 between junctions 2 and 4 and the A643 between Elland Road and the Armley Gyratory. It is not currently signposted as a complete route on the ground other than on the motorway section to the north of the city centre.

Motorway section junctions

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Note: both motorways have no junction numbers

A64(M) motorway

Eastbound exits

Junction

Westbound exits

Road continues as A64 towards Seacroft

The NORTH
York A64
Selby (A63)

Quarry Hill
Non Motorway Traffic

City Centre
(M1), (M621)
St James's Hospital, Bus and coach stations, Burmantofts, Harehills

Start of motorway

City Centre Loop
Harrogate A61
Wetherby (A58)
Moortown, Roundhay, Chapeltown, Quarry Hill

City Centre
Harrogate A61
Wetherby (A58)

No exit

Skipton A660
City Centre, University, Multi Storey Car Park, Infirmary

A58(M) motorway

Wetherby A58
Harrogate (A61)
Sheepscar, Meanwood

No exit

Skipton A660
University
Multi Storey Car Park

No exit

Civic Precinct, Infirmary

City Centre

Start of motorway

Ilkley A65
Leeds/Bradford  
Rail Station  

Ilkley A65
Leeds/Bradford  
Rail Station  
Non Motorway Traffic

Road continues as A58toArmley

(M621, M62, M1)
Halifax A58
Bradford (A647)
Huddersfield (A62)

See also

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References

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  • ^ a b "Leeds Construction Link – Building of the Inner Ring Road – Solution". Archived from the original on 18 June 2009. Retrieved 14 October 2006.
  • ^ "Leeds Construction Link – Building of the Inner Ring Road – Clearance". Archived from the original on 18 June 2009. Retrieved 14 October 2006.
  • ^ The Motorway Archive – Leeds Inner Ring Road Dates Page Archived 12 March 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  • ^ CBRD – Histories – Leeds Inner Ring Road – Map Archived 29 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • ^ "Leeds City Council Scheme Page". Archived from the original on 20 June 2009. Retrieved 14 October 2006.
  • edit

    53°48′03N 1°33′17W / 53.8009°N 1.5548°W / 53.8009; -1.5548


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Leeds_Inner_Ring_Road&oldid=1176111229"
     



    Last edited on 19 September 2023, at 15:06  





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    This page was last edited on 19 September 2023, at 15:06 (UTC).

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