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M25 motorway

The M25 or London Orbital Motorway is a major road encircling most of Greater London. The 117-mile (188-kilometre) motorway is one of the most important roads in the UK and one of the busiest. Margaret Thatcher opened the final section in 1986, making the M25 the longest ring road in Europe upon opening.[a] The Dartford Crossing completes the orbital route but is not classed as motorway; it is classed as a trunk road and designated as the A282. In some cases, including notable legal contexts such as the Communications Act 2003, the M25 is used as a de facto alternative boundary for Greater London.

M25
London Orbital Motorway
  M25 motorway   A282 Dartford Crossing

Shown with the UK motorway network
Junction 13 looking south
Route information
Part of E15 and E30[1]
Maintained by Connect Plus (contracted to National Highways)
Length117 mi (188 km)
Existed1975–present
HistoryOpened: 1975
Completed: 1986
Major junctions
Orbital around London (in conjunction with the A282)
Anti-clockwise endDartford (Dartford Crossing southern approach)
Major intersections
J3 → M20 motorway

J5 → M26 motorway

J7 → M23 motorway

J12 → M3 motorway

J15 → M4 motorway

J16 → M40 motorway

J21 → M1 motorway

J23 → A1(M) motorway

J27 → M11 motorway
Clockwise endThurrock (Dartford Crossing northern approach)
Location
CountryUnited Kingdom
CountiesKent, Surrey, Berkshire, Greater London, Buckinghamshire, Hertfordshire, Essex
Primary
destinations
London
Dartford Crossing
Sevenoaks
Gatwick Airport
Heathrow Airport
Watford
Stansted Airport
Brentwood
Road network
M23 M26

In the 1944 Greater London Plan, Patrick Abercrombie proposed an orbital motorway around London. This evolved into the London Ringways project in the early 1960s, and by 1966, planning had started on two projects, Ringway 3 to the north and Ringway 4 to the south. By the time the first sections opened in 1975, it was decided the ringways would be combined into a single orbital motorway. The M25 was one of the first motorway projects to consider environmental concerns and almost 40 public inquiries took place. The road was built as planned despite some protests that included the section over the North Downs and around Epping Forest which required an extension of the Bell Common Tunnel.

Although the M25 was popular during construction, it quickly became apparent that there was insufficient traffic capacity. Because of the public inquiries, several junctions merely served local roads where office and retail developments were built, attracting even more traffic onto the M25 than it was designed for. The congestion has led to traffic management schemes that include variable speed limit and smart motorway. Since opening, the M25 has been progressively widened, particularly near Heathrow Airport.

Description edit

Route edit

 
Map of the M25 showing the junction numbers and driver location signs

The M25 almost completely encircles Greater London and passes briefly through it, in the east and west.[2][3] Junctions 1A–5 are in Kent, 6–13 are in Surrey, 14 and a small part of 15 are in Hillingdon, Greater London, 15–16 are in Buckinghamshire, 17–24 are in Hertfordshire, 25 is in Enfield, Greater London and 26–31 are in Essex.[3] Policing of the road is carried out by an integrated group made up of the Metropolitan, Thames Valley, Essex, Kent, Hertfordshire and Surrey forces.[4] Primary destinations signed ahead on the motorway include the Dartford Crossing, Sevenoaks, Gatwick Airport, Heathrow Airport, Watford, Stansted Airport and Brentwood.[5]

To the east of London the two ends of the M25 are joined to complete a loop by the non-motorway A282 Dartford Crossing of the River Thames between Thurrock and Dartford. The crossing consists of twin two-lane tunnels and the four-lane QE2 (Queen Elizabeth II) bridge,[6][7] with a main span of 450 metres (1,480 ft).[8] Passage across the bridge or through the tunnels is subject to a charge between 6 am and 10 pm, its level depending on the kind of vehicle. The road is not under motorway regulations so that other traffic can cross the Thames east of the Woolwich Ferry;[b] the only crossing further to the east is a passenger ferry between Gravesend, Kent, and Tilbury, Essex.[10]

At junction 5, the clockwise carriageway of the M25 is routed off the main north–south dual carriageway onto the main east–west dual carriageway with the main north–south carriageway becoming the A21. In the opposite direction, to the east of the point where the M25 diverges from the main east–west carriageway, that carriageway becomes the M26 motorway.[11] From here to junction 8, the M25 follows the edge of the North Downs close to several historic buildings such as Chevening, Titsey Place, Hever Castle and Chartwell.[12][13] The interchange with the M23 motorway near Reigate is a four-level stack; one of only a few examples in Britain.[14] Past this, the M25 runs close to the Surrey Hills AONB.[12]

To the west, the M25 passes close to the edge of Heathrow Airport, and within sight of Windsor Castle.[15] North of this, it goes under the Chalfont Viaduct railway bridge, completed in 1906, which carries the Chiltern Main Line. Red kites can often be seen overhead to the north of this, up to junction 21. The northern section of the M25 passes close to All Saints Pastoral Centre near London Colney, Waltham Abbey and Copped Hall.[12][13] This section also features two cut-and-cover tunnels, including the Bell Common Tunnel.[13] The north-eastern section of the motorway passes close to North Ockendon, the only settlement of Greater London situated outside the M25.[16] It then runs close to the Rainham Marshes Nature Reserve before reaching the northern end of the Dartford Crossing.[12]

In 2004, following an opinion poll, the London Assembly proposed aligning the Greater London boundary with the M25.[c] "Inside the M25" and "outside/beyond the M25" are colloquial, looser alternatives to "Greater London" sometimes used in haulage. The Communications Act 2003 explicitly uses the M25 as the boundary in requiring a proportion of television programmes to be made outside the London area; it states a requirement of "a suitable proportion of the programmes made in the United Kingdom" to be made "in the United Kingdom outside the M25 area", defined in Section 362 as "the area the outer boundary of which is represented by the London Orbital Motorway (M25)".[18][19]

Sections of the M25 form part of two long-distance E-roads, designated by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe. The E15, which runs from Inverness to Algeciras,[20] follows the M25 and A282 clockwise from the A1(M) at junction 23 to the M20 at junction 3;[1] while the E30 Cork to Omsk route runs from the M4 at junction 15, clockwise to the A12 at junction 28.[1] The United Kingdom is formally part of the E-roads network but, unlike in other countries, these routes are not marked on any road signs.[21]

Features edit

The M25 was originally built mostly as a dual three-lane motorway.[22] Much of this has since been widened to dual four lanes for almost half, to a dual five-lanes section between junctions 12 and 14 and a dual six-lane section between junctions 14 and 15. Further widening is in progress of minor sections with plans for smart motorways in many others.[23]

Two motorway service areas are on the M25, and two others are directly accessible from it. Those on the M25 are Clacket Lane between junctions 5 and 6 (in the south-east) and Cobham between junctions 9 and 10 (in the south-west). Those directly accessible from it are South Mimms off junction 23 (to the north of London) and Thurrock off junction 31 (to the east of London).[24][25]

As is common with other motorways, the M25 is equipped with emergency ("SOS") telephones. These connect to two National Highways operated control centres at Godstone (for junctions 1 to 15 inclusive) and South Mimms (for 16–31). The Dartford Crossing has a dedicated control centre. There is an extensive network of closed circuit television (CCTV) on the motorway so incidents can be easily identified and located. A number of 4×4 vehicles patrol the motorway, attempting to keep traffic moving where possible, and assisting the local police. They can act as a rolling roadblock when there are obstacles on the road.[4]

When completed, the M25 only had street lighting for 65 miles (105 km) of its 117-mile (188 km) length.[26] Originally, low pressure sodium (SOX) lighting was the most prominent technology used, but this has been gradually replaced with high-pressure sodium (SON) lighting. As of 2015 the motorway has more than 10,000 streetlights.[27] The M25 has a number of pollution control valves along its length, which can shut off drainage in the event of a chemical or fuel spill.[27]

History edit

Plans edit

 
Map of Ringways 3 & 4 showing sections combined to form the M25

The idea of a general bypass around London was first proposed early in the 20th century. An outer orbital route around the capital had been suggested in 1913, and was re-examined as a motorway route in Sir Charles Bressey's and Sir Edwin Lutyens' The Highway Development Survey, 1937.[28] Sir Patrick Abercrombie's County of London Plan, 1943 and Greater London Plan, 1944 proposed a series of five roads encircling the capital.[29][30] The northern sections of the M25 follow a similar route to the Outer London Defence Ring, a concentric series of anti-tank defences and pillboxes designed to slow down a potential German invasion of the capital during World War II.[31] This was marked as the D Ring on Abercombie's plans. Following the war, 11 separate county councils told the Ministry of Transport that an orbital route was "first priority" for London.[32]

Plans stalled because the route was planned to pass through several urban areas, which attracted criticism. The original D Ring through northwest London was intended to be a simple upgrade of streets. In 1951, Middlesex County Council planned a route for the orbital road through the county, passing through Eastcote and west of Bushey, connecting with the proposed M1 motorway, but it was rejected by the Ministry two years later. An alternative route via Harrow and Ealing was proposed, but this was abandoned after the council revealed the extent of property demolition required.[32]

In 1964, the London County Council announced the London Ringways plan, to consist of four concentric motorway rings around London.[33] The following year, the transport minister Barbara Castle announced that the D Ring would be essential to build. The component parts of what became the M25 came from Ringway 3 / M16 motorway in the north and Ringway 4 in the south.[32]

The Ringways plan was controversial owing to the destruction required for the inner two ring roads, (Ringway 1 and Ringway 2). Parts of Ringway 1 were constructed (including the West Cross Route), despite stiff opposition, before the overall plan was postponed in February 1972. In April 1973, the Greater London Council elections resulted in a Labour Party victory; the party then formally announced the cancellation of the Ringways running inside Greater London.[34] This did not affect the routes that would become the M25, because they were planned as central government projects from the outset.[35]

Construction edit

 
View north from Higher Denham Fire Station at Tatling End on the A40 in July 1984, with the Chiltern Main Line five-arch 1906 Chalfont Viaduct, originally built to straddle the River Misbourne

There was no individual public inquiry into the M25 as a whole.[36] Each section was presented to planning authorities in its own right and was individually justified, with 39 separate public inquiries relating to sections of the route. The need for the ministry to negotiate with local councils meant that more junctions with local traffic were built than originally proposed.[37] A report in 1981 showed that the M25 had the potential to attract office and retail development along its route, negating the proposed traffic improvements and making Central London a less desirable place to work.[38] None of the motorway was prevented from being built by objections at the public inquiries.[39] However, as a consequence of the backlash against the Ringways, and criticism at the public inquiries, the motorway was built with environmental concerns in mind. New features included additional earth mounds, cuttings and fences that reduced noise, and over two million trees and shrubs to hide the view of the road.[40]

Construction of parts of the two outer ring roads, Ringways 3 and 4, began in 1973. The first section, between South Mimms and Potters Bar in Hertfordshire (junctions 23 to 24) opened in September 1975.[41][42] It was provisionally known as the M16 and was given the temporary general-purpose road designation A1178.[43] A section of the North Orbital Road between Rickmansworth and Hunton Bridge was proposed in 1966, with detailed planning in 1971. The road was constructed to motorway standards and opened in October 1976 as a section of the A405.[44] It eventually became part of the M25's route.[41][42] The section to the south, from Heathrow Airport to Rickmansworth had five separate routes proposed when a public inquiry was launched in 1974. The Department of Transport sent out 15,000 questionnaires about the preferred route, with 5,000 replies. A route was fixed in 1978, with objections delaying the start of construction in 1982.[39]

The southern section of what became the M25 through Surrey and Kent was first conceived to be an east–west road south of London to relieve the A25, and running parallel to it, with its eastern end following the route of what is now the M26. It was originally proposed as an all-purpose route, but was upgraded to motorway standard in 1966. It was the first section of the route announced as M25 from the beginning. The first section from Godstone to Reigate (junctions 6 to 8) was first planned in 1966 and opened in February 1976.[41][42] A section of Ringway 3 south of the river between Dartford and Swanley (junctions 1 to 3) was constructed between May 1974 and April 1977.[42]

 
Inside the Bell Common Tunnel near Epping

In 1975, following extensive opposition to some parts of Ringway 3 through Middlesex and South London, the transport minister John Gilbert announced that the north section of Ringway 3 already planned would be combined with the southern section of Ringway 4, forming a single orbital motorway to be known as the M25, and the M16 designation was dropped. This scheme required two additional sections to join what were two different schemes, from Swanley to Sevenoaks in the south-east and Hunton Bridge to Potters Bar in the north-west. The section of Ringway 3 west of South Mimms anti-clockwise around London to Swanley in Kent was cancelled.[36]

The section from Potters Bar to the Dartford Tunnel was constructed in stages from June 1979 onwards, with the final section between Waltham Cross (junction 25) to Theydon Garnon (junction 27) opening in January 1984.[42] This section, running through Epping Forest, attracted opposition and protests. In 1973, local residents had parked combine harvesters in Parliament Square in protest against the road, draped with large banners reading "Not Epping Likely". As a consequence of this, the Bell Common Tunnel that runs in this area is twice as long as originally proposed.[45]

The most controversial section of the M25 was that between Swanley and Sevenoaks (junctions 3 to 5) in Kent across the Darenth Valley, Badgers Mount and the North Downs. An 1,800-member group named Defend Darenth Valley and the North Downs Action Group (DANDAG) argued that the link was unnecessary, it would damage an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and it would be primarily used by local traffic as a bypass for the old A21 road between Farnborough and Sevenoaks.[46] After a length inquiry process, chaired by George Dobry QC, the transport minister Kenneth Clarke announced the motorway would be built as proposed.[47]

The section from the M40 motorway to the 1970s North Orbital Road construction (junctions 16 to 17) opened in January 1985.[46] The route under the Chalfont Viaduct meant the motorway was restricted to a width of three lanes in each direction.[48]

The Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, officially opened the M25 on 29 October 1986, with a ceremony in the section between junctions 22 to 23 (London Colney and South Mimms).[16] To avoid the threat of road protesters, the ceremony was held a quarter of a mile from the nearest bridge.[49] The total estimated cost of the motorway was around £1 billion. It required 2 million tonnes (2.2 million short tons) of concrete, 2.5 million tonnes (2.8 million short tons) of asphalt and involved the removal of 49 million cubic metres (1,700 million cubic feet) of spoil. Upon completion, it was the longest orbital motorway in the world at 117 miles (188 km).[46][a] At the opening ceremony, Thatcher announced that 98 miles (158 km) had been constructed while the Conservative Party were in office, calling it "a splendid achievement for Britain".[49] A 58-page brochure was published, commemorating the completion of the motorway.[50]

Operational history edit

 
The M4/M25 motorway junction (junction 15), near Heathrow Airport

The M25 was initially popular with the public. In the 1987 general election, the Conservatives won in every constituency that the motorway passed through, in particular gaining Thurrock from Labour. Coach tours were organised for a trip around the new road. However, it quickly became apparent that the M25 suffered from chronic congestion. A report in The Economist said it "had taken 70 years to plan [the motorway], 12 to build it and just one to find it was inadequate". Thatcher rebuked the negative response, calling it "carping and criticism".[51]

Traffic levels quickly exceeded the maximum design capacity. Two months before it opened, the government admitted that the three-lane section between junctions 11 and 13 was inadequate and that it would have to be widened to four.[51] In 1990, the Secretary of State for Transport announced plans to widen the whole of the M25 to four lanes.[52] By 1993 the motorway, designed for a maximum of 88,000 vehicles per day, was carrying 200,000.[53] At that time, the M25 carried 15% of UK motorway traffic and there were plans to add six lanes to the section from junctions 12 to 15, as well as widening the rest of the motorway to four lanes.[54]

In parts, particularly the western third, that plan went ahead. Again, however, plans to widen further sections to eight lanes (four each way) were scaled back in 2009 in response to rising costs. The plans were reinstated in the agreed Highways Agency 2013–14 business plan.[55]

In June 1992, the Department for Transport (DfT) announced a proposal to widen the section close to Heathrow Airport to fourteen lanes by way of three additional link roads.[56] That attracted fierce opposition from anti-motorway protesters who were critical of the Newbury Bypass and other schemes,[57] but also from local authorities. Surrey County Council led a formal objection to the widening scheme,[56] and it was cancelled shortly afterwards.[58] In 1994, the Standing Advisory Committee on Trunk Road Appraisal published a report saying that "the M25 experience most probably does ... serve as an example of a case where roads generate traffic" and that further improvements to the motorway were counter-productive.[56] In April 1995, the Transport Minister Brian Mawhinney announced that the Heathrow link roads would be scrapped.[59]

 
The M25 motorway near Heathrow, showing a MIDAS installed gantry

In 1995, a contract was awarded to widen the section between junctions 8 and 10 from six to eight lanes at a cost of £93.4 million,[60] and a Motorway Incident Detection and Automatic Signalling (MIDAS) system was introduced from junction 10 to junction 15 in 1995, at a cost of £13.5M. That was extended to junction 16 in 2002, at a cost of £11.7M. The system consists of a distributed network of traffic and weather sensors, speed cameras and variable-speed signs, that control traffic speeds with little human supervision.It has improved traffic flow slightly, reducing the amount of start-stop driving.[61]

After Labour won the 1997 election, the road budget was cut from £6 billion to £1.4 billion.[59] However, the DfT announced new proposals to widen the section between junction 12 (M3) and junction 15 (M4) to 12 lanes. At the Heathrow Terminal 5 public inquiry, a Highways Agency official said that the widening was needed to accommodate traffic to the proposed new terminal, but the transport minister said that no such evidence had been given.[62] Environmental groups objected to the decision to go ahead with a scheme to create the widest motorways in the UK, without holding a public inquiry.[63] Friends of the Earth claimed the real reason for the widening was to support Terminal 5.[59] The decision was again deferred. A ten-lane scheme was announced in 1998,[64] and the £148 million 'M25 Jct 12 to 15 Widening' contract was awarded to Balfour Beatty in 2003.[65] The scheme was completed in 2005, with dual-five lanes between junctions 12 and 14 and dual-six lanes from junctions 14 to 15.[66]

In 2007, junction 25 (A10/Waltham Cross) was remodelled to increase capacity. The nearby Holmesdale Tunnel was widened to three lanes in an easterly direction, and an additional left-turn lane added from the A10 onto the motorway. The total cost was £75 million.[67][68]

Work to widen the exit slip-roads in both directions at junction 28 (A12 / A1023) was completed in 2008. That was designed to reduce the amount of traffic queuing on the slip roads at busy periods, particularly traffic from the clockwise M25 joining the northbound A12.[69] In 2018, a new scheme was proposed, because the junction had reached capacity, accommodating over 7,500 vehicles per hour. The scheme involved building a two-lane link road between the M25 and the A12. The work was expected to be completed around 2021/22.[70]

Widening edit

 
Widening of the M25 Motorway near South Mimms

In 2006, the Highways Agency proposed widening 63 miles (101 km) of the M25 from six to eight lanes, between junctions 5 and 6, and 16 to 30, as part of a Design, Build, Finance and Operate (DBFO) project.[71] A shortlist of contractors was announced in October 2006 for the project, which was expected to cost £4.5 billion.[72] Contractors were asked to resubmit their bids in January 2008,[73] and in June 2009 the new transport minister indicated that the cost had risen to £5.5 billion and the benefit to cost ratio had dropped considerably.[74] In January 2009 the government announced that plans to widen the sections from junctions 5 to 7 and 23 to 27 had been 'scrapped' and that hard shoulder running would be introduced instead. However, widening to four lanes was reinstated in the 2013–14 Highways Agency Business Plan.[23][75]

In 2009, a £6.2 billion M25 DBFO private finance initiative contract[76] was awarded to Connect Plus to widen the sections between junctions 16 to 23 and 27 to 30, and maintain the M25 and the Dartford Crossing for a 30-year period.[77]

Work to widen the section between junctions 16 (M40) and 23 (A1(M)) to dual four lanes[78] started in July 2009 at an estimated cost of £580 million.[79] The junction 16 to 21 (M1) section was completed by July 2011 and the junction 21 to 23 by June 2012.[80] Works to widen the junctions 27 (M11) to 30 (A13) section to dual four lanes also started in July 2009. The junction 27 to 28 (A12) section was completed in July 2010,[81] and the junction 28 to 29 (A127) in June 2011, and finally the junction 29 to 30 (A13) section opened in May 2012.[82]

Work to introduce smart motorway technology and permanent hard shoulder running on two sections of the M25 began in 2013. The first section between junctions 5 (A21/M26) and 7 (M23) started construction in May 2013 with the scheme being completed and opened in April 2014.[83] The second section, between junctions 23 (A1/A1(M)) and 27 (M11), began construction in February 2013 and was completed and opened in November 2014.[84]

In December 2016, Highways England completed the capacity project at junction 30 (Thurrock) as part of the Thames Gateway Delivery Plan.[85] The £100 million scheme included widening the M25 to four lanes, adding additional link roads, and improvements to drainage.[86] The plans to expand junction 10, where the M25 meets the A3, have resulted in concerns about the amount of woodland that would be required.[87]

Traffic edit

 
Near Heathrow Airport, the M25 is six lanes wide in each direction.

The M25 is one of Europe's busiest motorways. In 2003, a maximum of 196,000 vehicles a day were recorded just south of Heathrow, between junctions 13 and 14.[88] The stretch between the nearby junctions 14 and 15 consistently records the highest daily traffic counts on the British strategic road network, with the average flow in 2018 being 219,492 vehicles (lower than the record peak measured in 2014 of 262,842).[89]

 
A control room for the M25 junction 5-7 smart motorway scheme

Traffic on the M25 is monitored by Connect Plus Services on behalf of National Highways. The company operates a series of transportable CCTV cameras that can be easily moved into congestion hotspots, allowing operators to have a clear view of the motorway and so assess what might be done to tackle particular areas of congestion.[90] Prior to its liquidation in 2018, Carillion was subcontracted to manage traffic on the M25, delivering live alerts from body-worn cameras via 3G, 4G and Wi-Fi.[91]

Since 1995, sections of the M25 have been equipped with variable speed limits, which slow traffic in the event of congestion or an obstruction, and help manage the traffic flow.[92] The scheme was originally trialled between junctions 10 and 16, and was made a permanent fixture in 1997.[93]

The Dartford Crossing is the only fixed vehicle crossing of the Thames east of Greater London.[94] It is also the busiest crossing in the United Kingdom, and consequently puts pressure on M25 traffic.[95] Users of the crossing do not pay a toll, but rather a congestion charge. The signs at the crossing are the same as those deployed over the London congestion charge zone.[96]

In 2009, the Department for Transport published options for a new Lower Thames Crossing to add capacity to the Dartford Crossing, or create a new road and crossing linking to the M2 and M20 motorways.[97] Plans for that stalled, and were cancelled in 2013 by the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, being replaced by a proposed Gallions Reach Crossing. Initially seen as a straight ferry replacement for the Woolwich Ferry, it was later mooted as a bridge or tunnel.[98][99] By 2019, the plans had changed, with the Docklands Light Railway to be extended to Thamesmead instead.[100]

Incidents edit

On 11 December 1984, nine people died and ten were injured in a multiple-vehicle collision between junctions 5 and 6. Twenty-six vehicles were involved when dense fog descended suddenly.[101]

On 16 December 1988, several vehicles were stolen and used as getaway for acts of murder and robbery, using the M25 to quickly move between targets. The M25 Three, including Raphael Rowe, were tried and sentenced to life imprisonment in 1990. Their convictions were overturned in 2000 and Rowe, who studied journalism while in prison, became an investigative journalist for the BBC.[102][103][104]

In 1996, Kenneth Noye murdered Stephen Cameron in a road rage incident while stopped at traffic lights on an M25 junction in Kent. He was convicted in 2000 and sentenced to life imprisonment.[105] He was released in June 2019.[106][107]

In November 2014, during overnight roadworks, a 16-foot (4.9 m) piece of road surface near junction 9 at Leatherhead failed to set correctly due to rain. This created a 1-foot (0.30 m) pothole in the road and caused a 12-mile (19 km) tailback. The Minister for Transport John Hayes criticised the work and the resulting traffic problems.[108]

The M25 has had problems with animals and birds on the carriageway. In 2009, the Highways Agency reported that they had been called out several times a week to remove a swan from the motorway around junction 13.[109] There have been several crashes resulting in horses escaping their horseboxes onto the carriageway.[110][111][112]

Racing edit

The motorway has attracted unofficial, and illegal, motor racing. At the end of the 1980s, before the advent of automated speed enforcement devices, owners of supercars would meet at night at service stations such as South Mimms and conduct time trials.[113] Times below 1 hour were achieved – an average speed of over 117 mph (188 km/h), which included coming to a halt at the Dartford Tunnel road user charge payment booths.[114][115] The winner received champagne rather than money. The Enfield Gazette referred to an "M25 club", and posters appeared near the M25 advertising the "First London Cannonball Run".[113] The racing had mostly disappeared by the end of the 1980s after speed cameras were introduced.[116]

Insulate Britain protests edit

In 2021, several sections of the M25 were disrupted after the home energy and insulation campaign group Insulate Britain blocked junctions including Nos. 3 (Swanley), 6 (Godstone), 14 (Heathrow), 20 (Kings Langley) and 31 (Lakeside). A spokesman for the AA said the actions were counterproductive, as they would cause increased vehicle emissions owing to delays, as well having a negative effect on the economy.[117][118] 92 people were arrested following the first incident on 13 September, followed by a further 70 two days later. Insulate Britain said they would continue to disrupt the M25 until the government responded.[119]

On 29 October, two days before the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference, Insulate Britain protests blocked traffic from junctions 21 to 22 in Hertfordshire and 28 to 29 in Essex. 19 arrests were made.[120]

Cultural references edit

The M25 is a form of social control to ensure disruptive elements in society are neutralised by keeping a significant proportion of them in continual motion.

Will Self[121]

The M25 and the Dartford Crossing are known for frequent traffic jams. This was noticed before the entire road had been completed; at the official opening ceremony Margaret Thatcher complained about "those who carp and criticise". The jams have inspired derogatory names, such as "Britain's Biggest Car Park"[122] and songs (e.g., Chris Rea's "The Road to Hell").[123] Nevertheless, coach tours around the M25 have continued to run into the 21st century.[124]

The M25 plays a role in the comedy-fantasy novel Good Omens, as "evidence for the hidden hand of Satan in the affairs of Man".[16] The demon character, Crowley, had manipulated the design of the M25 to resemble a Satanic sigil, and tried to ensure it would anger as many people as possible to drive them off the path of good.[125][126] The lengthy series of public inquiries for motorways throughout the 1970s, particularly the M25, influenced the opening of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, where the Earth is destroyed to make way for a hyperspace bypass.[127]

The M25 enjoyed a more positive reputation among ravers in the late 1980s, when this new orbital motorway became a popular route to the parties that took place around the outskirts of London.[128] Its use for these raves inspired the name of the electronic duo Orbital.[16]

Iain Sinclair's 2002 book and film London Orbital is based on a year-long journey around the M25 on foot.[129]

 
The "Give Peas a chance" graffiti on the Chalfont Viaduct, before its removal in 2018

A piece of graffiti on the Chalfont Viaduct, clearly visible from the M25 and reading "Give Peas a chance" (parodying John Lennon's "Give Peace a Chance") became popular with the public, attracting its own Facebook group.[130][131] The message originally read "Peas", supposedly the tag of a London graffiti artist; the rest of the wording is reported to have referred to his frequent clashes with the law.[132][133] In September 2018, after almost 20 years, the graffiti was vandalised and then removed and replaced with the message "Give Helch a break".[134] A spokesman for Network Rail sympathised with the requests to restore the "much-loved graffiti", but said they do not condone people putting their lives at risk by trespassing.[134][135]

Junctions and services edit

Data from driver location signs provide carriageway identifier information.[136] The numbers on the signs are kilometres from a point on the north side of the Dartford Crossing, while the letter is "A" for the clockwise carriageway and "B" for the anticlockwise. They are spaced every 500 metres (1,600 ft).[27]

The M25 has been criticised for having too many junctions; 14 of them serve only local roads.[37][137] In 2016, Edmund King, president of the Automobile Association, attributed congestion on the M25 to excessive junctions. This leads to "junction hoppers" who only use the motorway for a short distance before exiting;[138] their difference in speed when entering and leaving the main carriageway causes a domino effect, resulting in all vehicles slowing down.[139] Drivers who only use the M25 to travel a short distance are believed by some to have less overall driving experience, exacerbating traffic and safety issues.[138]

The M25 originally opened without any service areas. The first, at South Mimms, was opened by Margaret Thatcher in June 1987, a week before the election. Thatcher admired the practical and no-frills architecture of Charles Forte and praised him in her opening speech.[140] The second, Clacket Lane, was opened by Robert Key, Minister for Roads and Traffic, on 21 July 1993. [141] Construction was delayed as the remains of a Roman villa were found on the site, requiring archaeological research.[142] The other service area between junctions is Cobham, which opened on 13 September 2012.[25]

A282 (Dartford Crossing)
miles km[136][d] Clockwise exits (A carriageway)[136] Junction Anti-clockwise exits (B carriageway) Opening date[46]
0.0 0.0 Dartford Crossing South
(Queen Elizabeth II Bridge)
 
River
Thames
Dartford Crossing North
(Dartford Tunnels)
 
November 1963 (west tunnel)
May 1980 (east tunnel)
October 1991 (bridge)
Entering Kent Entering Essex
3.5 5.7 Swanscombe, Erith, Bluewater A206 J1A[e] Swanscombe, Erith A206 September 1986
4.7 7.5 Dartford A225 J1B No Exit September 1986
M25
5.5 8.8 London (SE & C), Bexleyheath A2
Canterbury (M2)
Ebbsfleet International  

Non Motorway Traffic
J2 London (SE & C), Bexleyheath, Bluewater A2
Canterbury (M2)
Dartford (A225)
Ebbsfleet International  
September 1986 (northbound)
April 1977 (southbound)
8.7 14.0 Dover, Channel Tunnel, Maidstone M20
London (SE), Swanley A20
J3 London (SE & C), Lewisham A20
Channel Tunnel, Maidstone M20
April 1977 (northbound)
February 1986 (southbound)
12.2 19.6 Bromley A21
Orpington A224
J4 London (SE), Bromley A21
Orpington A224
February 1986
16.3
16.4
26.2
26.4
Sevenoaks, Hastings A21 J5 Dover, Channel Tunnel, Maidstone
M26 (M20)
Sevenoaks, Hastings A21
July 1980
Entering Surrey Entering Kent
21.0 33.8 Clacket Lane services Services Clacket Lane services July 1993
25.8 41.6 Eastbourne, Godstone, Caterham A22
Redhill, Westerham (A25)
J6 Eastbourne, Godstone, Caterham A22
Westerham (A25)
November 1979 (eastbound)
February 1976 (westbound)
28.6 46.0 Brighton, Crawley
Gatwick  
Croydon
M23
J7 Croydon
Brighton, Gatwick  
M23
February 1976
31.9 51.4 Reigate, Sutton A217
Kingston (A240)
J8 Sutton, Reigate A217
Redhill (A25)
February 1976 (eastbound)
October 1985 (westbound)
38.5
39.5
62.0
63.5
Leatherhead A243
Dorking (A24)
J9 Leatherhead A243
Dorking (A24)
October 1985
42.6
43.2
68.6
69.5
Cobham services Services Cobham services September 2012
45.0 72.4 Portsmouth, Guildford, London (SW & C)
A3
J10 London (SW), Kingston, Guildford, Portsmouth
A3
October 1985 (eastbound)
December 1983 (westbound)
49.8 80.2 Woking A320
Chertsey A317
J11 Chertsey A317
Woking A320
December 1983 (southbound)
October 1980 (northbound)
52.1 83.8 Basingstoke, Southampton
Richmond
M3
J12 The SOUTH WEST, Southampton
London (SW & C), Richmond
M3
October 1980 (southbound)
December 1976 (northbound)
Entering Berkshire Entering Surrey
Entering Surrey Entering Berkshire
55.2 88.8 London (W), Hounslow, Staines A30 J13 London (W), Hounslow, Staines A30 November 1981 (southbound)
August 1982 (northbound)
Entering Greater London Entering Surrey
57.0 91.8 Heathrow  
(T 4, 5 & Cargo) A3113
J14 Heathrow   (T4, 5 and Cargo) A3113 August 1982 (southbound)
September 1985 (northbound)
Entering Buckinghamshire Entering Greater London
59.0 95.0 The WEST, Reading, Slough
London (W & C), Heathrow   (T1, 2 & 3)
M4
J15 London (W), Heathrow   (T1, 2 & 3)
The WEST, Slough, Reading
M4
September 1985
63.8 102.6 Birmingham, Oxford
Uxbridge, London (W)
M40
J16 Uxbridge, London (W & C)
Birmingham, Oxford
M40
September 1985 (southbound)
January 1985 (northbound)
Entering Hertfordshire Entering Buckinghamshire
68.7 110.5 Rickmansworth, Maple Cross A412 J17 Maple Cross A412 January 1985 (southbound)
February 1976 (northbound)
69.9 112.5 Amersham, Chorleywood A404 J18 Amersham, Chorleywood, Rickmansworth A404 February 1976
71.5 116.4 Watford A41 J19 No Exit September 1976
73.5 118.2 Hemel Hempstead, Aylesbury A41 J20 Hemel Hempstead, Aylesbury, Watford A41 August 1986
76.3 122.8 The NORTH
Luton & Airport  
M1
J21 The NORTH
Luton & Airport  
M1
August 1986
76.9 123.7 (M1 South)
St Albans, London (NW & C) A405
J21A (M1 South)
St Albans, London (NW & C), Watford A405
August 1986
80.6 129.7 St Albans A1081 J22 St Albans A1081 August 1986
83.3 134.0 Hatfield A1(M)
London (N & C) A1
Barnet A1081
South Mimms services
J23 London (N & C) A1
Barnet A1081
Hatfield A1(M)
South Mimms services
August 1986 (westbound)
September 1975 (eastbound)
85.9 138.2 Potters Bar A111 J24 Potters Bar A111 September 1975 (westbound)
June 1981 (eastbound)
Entering Greater London Entering Hertfordshire
91.4 147.1 London (N & C)
Enfield, Hertford A10
J25 London (N & C)
Enfield, Hertford A10
June 1981 (westbound)
January 1984 (eastbound)
Entering Essex Entering Greater London
94.9 152.7 Waltham Abbey, Loughton A121 J26 Waltham Abbey, Loughton A121 January 1984
99.2 159.7 Cambridge, Stansted  , Harlow
London (N & E)
M11
J27 London (NE & C)
Cambridge, Harlow, Stansted  
M11
January 1984 (westbound)
April 1983 (eastbound)
Entering Greater London Entering Essex
107.1 172.4 Chelmsford, London (E & C), Romford A12
Brentwood A1023
J28 Chelmsford A12
Brentwood A1023
April 1983
Entering Essex Entering Greater London
Entering Greater London Entering Essex 54°10′12″N 2°44′15″W / 54.17005°N 2.73748°W / 54.17005; -2.73748
109.9 176.8 Southend, Southend Airport  , Basildon A127 J29 London (E & C), Romford, Southend, Southend Airport  , Basildon A127 April 1983 (northbound)
December 1982 (southbound)
Entering Essex Entering Greater London
115.2 185.4 Tilbury, Thurrock, Lakeside, London (E & C) A13
Thurrock services
J30 London (E & C), Tilbury, Thurrock, Lakeside A13
Thurrock services

Non Motorway Traffic
December 1982
A282 (Dartford Crossing)
115.9 186.6 No Exit J31 Thurrock, Lakeside A1306
Purfleet (A1090)
West Thurrock (A126)
Thurrock services
December 1982
Dartford Crossing South
(Queen Elizabeth II Bridge)
 
River
Thames
Dartford Crossing North
(Dartford Tunnels)
 
November 1963 (west tunnel)
May 1980 (east tunnel)
October 1991 (bridge)
Entering Kent Entering Essex
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.
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ a b Since the completion of the M25, the Berliner Ring has been completed to run at a slightly longer 196 km (122 mi)[144]
  2. ^ Pedestrians and cyclists cannot directly use the Dartford Crossing, but a shuttle service is available for the latter.[9]
  3. ^ This move would be bound to be resisted by the communities affected, including Watford, Loughton and Epsom.[17]
  4. ^ The table gives details of each junction, including the roads interchanged and the destinations that are signed from the motorway on the blue advance direction signs. Figures in kilometres are from the driver location signs; figures in miles are derived from them.
  5. ^ Junctions 1A and 1B are part of the A282, though they use the M25's numbering scheme.[143]

Citations edit

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General and cited sources edit

  • Asher, Wayne (2018). Rings Around London: Orbital motorways and the battle for homes before roads. Capital History. ISBN 978-1854144218.
  • Baldwin, Peter; Bridle, Ron; Baldwin, Robert; Porter, John (2002). The Motorway Achievement, Volume 1. Thomas Telford. ISBN 978-0-727-73196-8.
  • Bramley, J. F. (1946). Roads for Britain: a digest of plans of future highways (2nd ed.). Staples Press.
  • Hamilton, Ray (2015). M25: A Circular Tour of the London Orbital. Summersdale Publishers. ISBN 978-1-783-72656-1.
  • Moran, Joe (2005). Reading the Everyday. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-31709-2.
  • Moran, Joe (2009). On Roads: A Hidden History. Profile Books. ISBN 978-1-846-68052-6.
  • Smith, Denis (2001). London and the Thames Valley. Thomas Telford. ISBN 978-0-727-72876-0.
  • United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (1 November 2016). "ECE/TRANS/SC.1/2016/3/Rev.1: European Agreement on Main International Traffic Arteries" (PDF).

Further reading edit

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata

motorway, london, orbital, motorway, major, road, encircling, most, greater, london, mile, kilometre, motorway, most, important, roads, busiest, margaret, thatcher, opened, final, section, 1986, making, longest, ring, road, europe, upon, opening, dartford, cro. The M25 or London Orbital Motorway is a major road encircling most of Greater London The 117 mile 188 kilometre motorway is one of the most important roads in the UK and one of the busiest Margaret Thatcher opened the final section in 1986 making the M25 the longest ring road in Europe upon opening a The Dartford Crossing completes the orbital route but is not classed as motorway it is classed as a trunk road and designated as the A282 In some cases including notable legal contexts such as the Communications Act 2003 the M25 is used as a de facto alternative boundary for Greater London M25London Orbital Motorway M25 motorway A282 Dartford Crossing Show interactive mapShown with the UK motorway network Show UK motorways mapJunction 13 looking southRoute informationPart of E15 and E30 1 Maintained by Connect Plus contracted to National Highways Length117 mi 188 km Existed1975 presentHistoryOpened 1975Completed 1986Major junctionsOrbital around London in conjunction with the A282 Anti clockwise endDartford Dartford Crossing southern approach Major intersectionsJ3 M20 motorway J5 M26 motorway J7 M23 motorway J12 M3 motorway J15 M4 motorway J16 M40 motorway J21 M1 motorway J23 A1 M motorway J27 M11 motorwayClockwise endThurrock Dartford Crossing northern approach LocationCountryUnited KingdomCountiesKent Surrey Berkshire Greater London Buckinghamshire Hertfordshire EssexPrimarydestinationsLondonDartford CrossingSevenoaksGatwick AirportHeathrow AirportWatfordStansted AirportBrentwoodRoad networkRoads in the United KingdomMotorways A and B road zones M23 M26In the 1944 Greater London Plan Patrick Abercrombie proposed an orbital motorway around London This evolved into the London Ringways project in the early 1960s and by 1966 planning had started on two projects Ringway 3 to the north and Ringway 4 to the south By the time the first sections opened in 1975 it was decided the ringways would be combined into a single orbital motorway The M25 was one of the first motorway projects to consider environmental concerns and almost 40 public inquiries took place The road was built as planned despite some protests that included the section over the North Downs and around Epping Forest which required an extension of the Bell Common Tunnel Although the M25 was popular during construction it quickly became apparent that there was insufficient traffic capacity Because of the public inquiries several junctions merely served local roads where office and retail developments were built attracting even more traffic onto the M25 than it was designed for The congestion has led to traffic management schemes that include variable speed limit and smart motorway Since opening the M25 has been progressively widened particularly near Heathrow Airport Contents 1 Description 1 1 Route 1 2 Features 2 History 2 1 Plans 2 2 Construction 2 3 Operational history 2 4 Widening 3 Traffic 4 Incidents 4 1 Racing 4 2 Insulate Britain protests 5 Cultural references 6 Junctions and services 7 References 7 1 Explanatory notes 7 2 Citations 7 3 General and cited sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksDescription editRoute edit nbsp Map of the M25 showing the junction numbers and driver location signsThe M25 almost completely encircles Greater London and passes briefly through it in the east and west 2 3 Junctions 1A 5 are in Kent 6 13 are in Surrey 14 and a small part of 15 are in Hillingdon Greater London 15 16 are in Buckinghamshire 17 24 are in Hertfordshire 25 is in Enfield Greater London and 26 31 are in Essex 3 Policing of the road is carried out by an integrated group made up of the Metropolitan Thames Valley Essex Kent Hertfordshire and Surrey forces 4 Primary destinations signed ahead on the motorway include the Dartford Crossing Sevenoaks Gatwick Airport Heathrow Airport Watford Stansted Airport and Brentwood 5 To the east of London the two ends of the M25 are joined to complete a loop by the non motorway A282 Dartford Crossing of the River Thames between Thurrock and Dartford The crossing consists of twin two lane tunnels and the four lane QE2 Queen Elizabeth II bridge 6 7 with a main span of 450 metres 1 480 ft 8 Passage across the bridge or through the tunnels is subject to a charge between 6 am and 10 pm its level depending on the kind of vehicle The road is not under motorway regulations so that other traffic can cross the Thames east of the Woolwich Ferry b the only crossing further to the east is a passenger ferry between Gravesend Kent and Tilbury Essex 10 At junction 5 the clockwise carriageway of the M25 is routed off the main north south dual carriageway onto the main east west dual carriageway with the main north south carriageway becoming the A21 In the opposite direction to the east of the point where the M25 diverges from the main east west carriageway that carriageway becomes the M26 motorway 11 From here to junction 8 the M25 follows the edge of the North Downs close to several historic buildings such as Chevening Titsey Place Hever Castle and Chartwell 12 13 The interchange with the M23 motorway near Reigate is a four level stack one of only a few examples in Britain 14 Past this the M25 runs close to the Surrey Hills AONB 12 To the west the M25 passes close to the edge of Heathrow Airport and within sight of Windsor Castle 15 North of this it goes under the Chalfont Viaduct railway bridge completed in 1906 which carries the Chiltern Main Line Red kites can often be seen overhead to the north of this up to junction 21 The northern section of the M25 passes close to All Saints Pastoral Centre near London Colney Waltham Abbey and Copped Hall 12 13 This section also features two cut and cover tunnels including the Bell Common Tunnel 13 The north eastern section of the motorway passes close to North Ockendon the only settlement of Greater London situated outside the M25 16 It then runs close to the Rainham Marshes Nature Reserve before reaching the northern end of the Dartford Crossing 12 In 2004 following an opinion poll the London Assembly proposed aligning the Greater London boundary with the M25 c Inside the M25 and outside beyond the M25 are colloquial looser alternatives to Greater London sometimes used in haulage The Communications Act 2003 explicitly uses the M25 as the boundary in requiring a proportion of television programmes to be made outside the London area it states a requirement of a suitable proportion of the programmes made in the United Kingdom to be made in the United Kingdom outside the M25 area defined in Section 362 as the area the outer boundary of which is represented by the London Orbital Motorway M25 18 19 Sections of the M25 form part of two long distance E roads designated by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe The E15 which runs from Inverness to Algeciras 20 follows the M25 and A282 clockwise from the A1 M at junction 23 to the M20 at junction 3 1 while the E30 Cork to Omsk route runs from the M4 at junction 15 clockwise to the A12 at junction 28 1 The United Kingdom is formally part of the E roads network but unlike in other countries these routes are not marked on any road signs 21 Features edit The M25 was originally built mostly as a dual three lane motorway 22 Much of this has since been widened to dual four lanes for almost half to a dual five lanes section between junctions 12 and 14 and a dual six lane section between junctions 14 and 15 Further widening is in progress of minor sections with plans for smart motorways in many others 23 Two motorway service areas are on the M25 and two others are directly accessible from it Those on the M25 are Clacket Lane between junctions 5 and 6 in the south east and Cobham between junctions 9 and 10 in the south west Those directly accessible from it are South Mimms off junction 23 to the north of London and Thurrock off junction 31 to the east of London 24 25 As is common with other motorways the M25 is equipped with emergency SOS telephones These connect to two National Highways operated control centres at Godstone for junctions 1 to 15 inclusive and South Mimms for 16 31 The Dartford Crossing has a dedicated control centre There is an extensive network of closed circuit television CCTV on the motorway so incidents can be easily identified and located A number of 4 4 vehicles patrol the motorway attempting to keep traffic moving where possible and assisting the local police They can act as a rolling roadblock when there are obstacles on the road 4 When completed the M25 only had street lighting for 65 miles 105 km of its 117 mile 188 km length 26 Originally low pressure sodium SOX lighting was the most prominent technology used but this has been gradually replaced with high pressure sodium SON lighting As of 2015 update the motorway has more than 10 000 streetlights 27 The M25 has a number of pollution control valves along its length which can shut off drainage in the event of a chemical or fuel spill 27 History editPlans edit nbsp Map of Ringways 3 amp 4 showing sections combined to form the M25The idea of a general bypass around London was first proposed early in the 20th century An outer orbital route around the capital had been suggested in 1913 and was re examined as a motorway route in Sir Charles Bressey s and Sir Edwin Lutyens The Highway Development Survey 1937 28 Sir Patrick Abercrombie s County of London Plan 1943 and Greater London Plan 1944 proposed a series of five roads encircling the capital 29 30 The northern sections of the M25 follow a similar route to the Outer London Defence Ring a concentric series of anti tank defences and pillboxes designed to slow down a potential German invasion of the capital during World War II 31 This was marked as the D Ring on Abercombie s plans Following the war 11 separate county councils told the Ministry of Transport that an orbital route was first priority for London 32 Plans stalled because the route was planned to pass through several urban areas which attracted criticism The original D Ring through northwest London was intended to be a simple upgrade of streets In 1951 Middlesex County Council planned a route for the orbital road through the county passing through Eastcote and west of Bushey connecting with the proposed M1 motorway but it was rejected by the Ministry two years later An alternative route via Harrow and Ealing was proposed but this was abandoned after the council revealed the extent of property demolition required 32 In 1964 the London County Council announced the London Ringways plan to consist of four concentric motorway rings around London 33 The following year the transport minister Barbara Castle announced that the D Ring would be essential to build The component parts of what became the M25 came from Ringway 3 M16 motorway in the north and Ringway 4 in the south 32 The Ringways plan was controversial owing to the destruction required for the inner two ring roads Ringway 1 and Ringway 2 Parts of Ringway 1 were constructed including the West Cross Route despite stiff opposition before the overall plan was postponed in February 1972 In April 1973 the Greater London Council elections resulted in a Labour Party victory the party then formally announced the cancellation of the Ringways running inside Greater London 34 This did not affect the routes that would become the M25 because they were planned as central government projects from the outset 35 Construction edit nbsp View north from Higher Denham Fire Station at Tatling End on the A40 in July 1984 with the Chiltern Main Line five arch 1906 Chalfont Viaduct originally built to straddle the River MisbourneThere was no individual public inquiry into the M25 as a whole 36 Each section was presented to planning authorities in its own right and was individually justified with 39 separate public inquiries relating to sections of the route The need for the ministry to negotiate with local councils meant that more junctions with local traffic were built than originally proposed 37 A report in 1981 showed that the M25 had the potential to attract office and retail development along its route negating the proposed traffic improvements and making Central London a less desirable place to work 38 None of the motorway was prevented from being built by objections at the public inquiries 39 However as a consequence of the backlash against the Ringways and criticism at the public inquiries the motorway was built with environmental concerns in mind New features included additional earth mounds cuttings and fences that reduced noise and over two million trees and shrubs to hide the view of the road 40 Construction of parts of the two outer ring roads Ringways 3 and 4 began in 1973 The first section between South Mimms and Potters Bar in Hertfordshire junctions 23 to 24 opened in September 1975 41 42 It was provisionally known as the M16 and was given the temporary general purpose road designation A1178 43 A section of the North Orbital Road between Rickmansworth and Hunton Bridge was proposed in 1966 with detailed planning in 1971 The road was constructed to motorway standards and opened in October 1976 as a section of the A405 44 It eventually became part of the M25 s route 41 42 The section to the south from Heathrow Airport to Rickmansworth had five separate routes proposed when a public inquiry was launched in 1974 The Department of Transport sent out 15 000 questionnaires about the preferred route with 5 000 replies A route was fixed in 1978 with objections delaying the start of construction in 1982 39 The southern section of what became the M25 through Surrey and Kent was first conceived to be an east west road south of London to relieve the A25 and running parallel to it with its eastern end following the route of what is now the M26 It was originally proposed as an all purpose route but was upgraded to motorway standard in 1966 It was the first section of the route announced as M25 from the beginning The first section from Godstone to Reigate junctions 6 to 8 was first planned in 1966 and opened in February 1976 41 42 A section of Ringway 3 south of the river between Dartford and Swanley junctions 1 to 3 was constructed between May 1974 and April 1977 42 nbsp Inside the Bell Common Tunnel near EppingIn 1975 following extensive opposition to some parts of Ringway 3 through Middlesex and South London the transport minister John Gilbert announced that the north section of Ringway 3 already planned would be combined with the southern section of Ringway 4 forming a single orbital motorway to be known as the M25 and the M16 designation was dropped This scheme required two additional sections to join what were two different schemes from Swanley to Sevenoaks in the south east and Hunton Bridge to Potters Bar in the north west The section of Ringway 3 west of South Mimms anti clockwise around London to Swanley in Kent was cancelled 36 The section from Potters Bar to the Dartford Tunnel was constructed in stages from June 1979 onwards with the final section between Waltham Cross junction 25 to Theydon Garnon junction 27 opening in January 1984 42 This section running through Epping Forest attracted opposition and protests In 1973 local residents had parked combine harvesters in Parliament Square in protest against the road draped with large banners reading Not Epping Likely As a consequence of this the Bell Common Tunnel that runs in this area is twice as long as originally proposed 45 The most controversial section of the M25 was that between Swanley and Sevenoaks junctions 3 to 5 in Kent across the Darenth Valley Badgers Mount and the North Downs An 1 800 member group named Defend Darenth Valley and the North Downs Action Group DANDAG argued that the link was unnecessary it would damage an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and it would be primarily used by local traffic as a bypass for the old A21 road between Farnborough and Sevenoaks 46 After a length inquiry process chaired by George Dobry QC the transport minister Kenneth Clarke announced the motorway would be built as proposed 47 The section from the M40 motorway to the 1970s North Orbital Road construction junctions 16 to 17 opened in January 1985 46 The route under the Chalfont Viaduct meant the motorway was restricted to a width of three lanes in each direction 48 The Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher officially opened the M25 on 29 October 1986 with a ceremony in the section between junctions 22 to 23 London Colney and South Mimms 16 To avoid the threat of road protesters the ceremony was held a quarter of a mile from the nearest bridge 49 The total estimated cost of the motorway was around 1 billion It required 2 million tonnes 2 2 million short tons of concrete 2 5 million tonnes 2 8 million short tons of asphalt and involved the removal of 49 million cubic metres 1 700 million cubic feet of spoil Upon completion it was the longest orbital motorway in the world at 117 miles 188 km 46 a At the opening ceremony Thatcher announced that 98 miles 158 km had been constructed while the Conservative Party were in office calling it a splendid achievement for Britain 49 A 58 page brochure was published commemorating the completion of the motorway 50 Operational history edit nbsp The M4 M25 motorway junction junction 15 near Heathrow AirportThe M25 was initially popular with the public In the 1987 general election the Conservatives won in every constituency that the motorway passed through in particular gaining Thurrock from Labour Coach tours were organised for a trip around the new road However it quickly became apparent that the M25 suffered from chronic congestion A report in The Economist said it had taken 70 years to plan the motorway 12 to build it and just one to find it was inadequate Thatcher rebuked the negative response calling it carping and criticism 51 Traffic levels quickly exceeded the maximum design capacity Two months before it opened the government admitted that the three lane section between junctions 11 and 13 was inadequate and that it would have to be widened to four 51 In 1990 the Secretary of State for Transport announced plans to widen the whole of the M25 to four lanes 52 By 1993 the motorway designed for a maximum of 88 000 vehicles per day was carrying 200 000 53 At that time the M25 carried 15 of UK motorway traffic and there were plans to add six lanes to the section from junctions 12 to 15 as well as widening the rest of the motorway to four lanes 54 In parts particularly the western third that plan went ahead Again however plans to widen further sections to eight lanes four each way were scaled back in 2009 in response to rising costs The plans were reinstated in the agreed Highways Agency 2013 14 business plan 55 In June 1992 the Department for Transport DfT announced a proposal to widen the section close to Heathrow Airport to fourteen lanes by way of three additional link roads 56 That attracted fierce opposition from anti motorway protesters who were critical of the Newbury Bypass and other schemes 57 but also from local authorities Surrey County Council led a formal objection to the widening scheme 56 and it was cancelled shortly afterwards 58 In 1994 the Standing Advisory Committee on Trunk Road Appraisal published a report saying that the M25 experience most probably does serve as an example of a case where roads generate traffic and that further improvements to the motorway were counter productive 56 In April 1995 the Transport Minister Brian Mawhinney announced that the Heathrow link roads would be scrapped 59 nbsp The M25 motorway near Heathrow showing a MIDAS installed gantryIn 1995 a contract was awarded to widen the section between junctions 8 and 10 from six to eight lanes at a cost of 93 4 million 60 and a Motorway Incident Detection and Automatic Signalling MIDAS system was introduced from junction 10 to junction 15 in 1995 at a cost of 13 5M That was extended to junction 16 in 2002 at a cost of 11 7M The system consists of a distributed network of traffic and weather sensors speed cameras and variable speed signs that control traffic speeds with little human supervision It has improved traffic flow slightly reducing the amount of start stop driving 61 After Labour won the 1997 election the road budget was cut from 6 billion to 1 4 billion 59 However the DfT announced new proposals to widen the section between junction 12 M3 and junction 15 M4 to 12 lanes At the Heathrow Terminal 5 public inquiry a Highways Agency official said that the widening was needed to accommodate traffic to the proposed new terminal but the transport minister said that no such evidence had been given 62 Environmental groups objected to the decision to go ahead with a scheme to create the widest motorways in the UK without holding a public inquiry 63 Friends of the Earth claimed the real reason for the widening was to support Terminal 5 59 The decision was again deferred A ten lane scheme was announced in 1998 64 and the 148 million M25 Jct 12 to 15 Widening contract was awarded to Balfour Beatty in 2003 65 The scheme was completed in 2005 with dual five lanes between junctions 12 and 14 and dual six lanes from junctions 14 to 15 66 In 2007 junction 25 A10 Waltham Cross was remodelled to increase capacity The nearby Holmesdale Tunnel was widened to three lanes in an easterly direction and an additional left turn lane added from the A10 onto the motorway The total cost was 75 million 67 68 Work to widen the exit slip roads in both directions at junction 28 A12 A1023 was completed in 2008 That was designed to reduce the amount of traffic queuing on the slip roads at busy periods particularly traffic from the clockwise M25 joining the northbound A12 69 In 2018 a new scheme was proposed because the junction had reached capacity accommodating over 7 500 vehicles per hour The scheme involved building a two lane link road between the M25 and the A12 The work was expected to be completed around 2021 22 70 Widening edit nbsp Widening of the M25 Motorway near South MimmsIn 2006 the Highways Agency proposed widening 63 miles 101 km of the M25 from six to eight lanes between junctions 5 and 6 and 16 to 30 as part of a Design Build Finance and Operate DBFO project 71 A shortlist of contractors was announced in October 2006 for the project which was expected to cost 4 5 billion 72 Contractors were asked to resubmit their bids in January 2008 73 and in June 2009 the new transport minister indicated that the cost had risen to 5 5 billion and the benefit to cost ratio had dropped considerably 74 In January 2009 the government announced that plans to widen the sections from junctions 5 to 7 and 23 to 27 had been scrapped and that hard shoulder running would be introduced instead However widening to four lanes was reinstated in the 2013 14 Highways Agency Business Plan 23 75 In 2009 a 6 2 billion M25 DBFO private finance initiative contract 76 was awarded to Connect Plus to widen the sections between junctions 16 to 23 and 27 to 30 and maintain the M25 and the Dartford Crossing for a 30 year period 77 Work to widen the section between junctions 16 M40 and 23 A1 M to dual four lanes 78 started in July 2009 at an estimated cost of 580 million 79 The junction 16 to 21 M1 section was completed by July 2011 and the junction 21 to 23 by June 2012 80 Works to widen the junctions 27 M11 to 30 A13 section to dual four lanes also started in July 2009 The junction 27 to 28 A12 section was completed in July 2010 81 and the junction 28 to 29 A127 in June 2011 and finally the junction 29 to 30 A13 section opened in May 2012 82 Work to introduce smart motorway technology and permanent hard shoulder running on two sections of the M25 began in 2013 The first section between junctions 5 A21 M26 and 7 M23 started construction in May 2013 with the scheme being completed and opened in April 2014 83 The second section between junctions 23 A1 A1 M and 27 M11 began construction in February 2013 and was completed and opened in November 2014 84 In December 2016 Highways England completed the capacity project at junction 30 Thurrock as part of the Thames Gateway Delivery Plan 85 The 100 million scheme included widening the M25 to four lanes adding additional link roads and improvements to drainage 86 The plans to expand junction 10 where the M25 meets the A3 have resulted in concerns about the amount of woodland that would be required 87 Traffic edit nbsp Near Heathrow Airport the M25 is six lanes wide in each direction The M25 is one of Europe s busiest motorways In 2003 a maximum of 196 000 vehicles a day were recorded just south of Heathrow between junctions 13 and 14 88 The stretch between the nearby junctions 14 and 15 consistently records the highest daily traffic counts on the British strategic road network with the average flow in 2018 being 219 492 vehicles lower than the record peak measured in 2014 of 262 842 89 nbsp A control room for the M25 junction 5 7 smart motorway schemeTraffic on the M25 is monitored by Connect Plus Services on behalf of National Highways The company operates a series of transportable CCTV cameras that can be easily moved into congestion hotspots allowing operators to have a clear view of the motorway and so assess what might be done to tackle particular areas of congestion 90 Prior to its liquidation in 2018 Carillion was subcontracted to manage traffic on the M25 delivering live alerts from body worn cameras via 3G 4G and Wi Fi 91 Since 1995 sections of the M25 have been equipped with variable speed limits which slow traffic in the event of congestion or an obstruction and help manage the traffic flow 92 The scheme was originally trialled between junctions 10 and 16 and was made a permanent fixture in 1997 93 The Dartford Crossing is the only fixed vehicle crossing of the Thames east of Greater London 94 It is also the busiest crossing in the United Kingdom and consequently puts pressure on M25 traffic 95 Users of the crossing do not pay a toll but rather a congestion charge The signs at the crossing are the same as those deployed over the London congestion charge zone 96 In 2009 the Department for Transport published options for a new Lower Thames Crossing to add capacity to the Dartford Crossing or create a new road and crossing linking to the M2 and M20 motorways 97 Plans for that stalled and were cancelled in 2013 by the Mayor of London Boris Johnson being replaced by a proposed Gallions Reach Crossing Initially seen as a straight ferry replacement for the Woolwich Ferry it was later mooted as a bridge or tunnel 98 99 By 2019 the plans had changed with the Docklands Light Railway to be extended to Thamesmead instead 100 Incidents editOn 11 December 1984 nine people died and ten were injured in a multiple vehicle collision between junctions 5 and 6 Twenty six vehicles were involved when dense fog descended suddenly 101 On 16 December 1988 several vehicles were stolen and used as getaway for acts of murder and robbery using the M25 to quickly move between targets The M25 Three including Raphael Rowe were tried and sentenced to life imprisonment in 1990 Their convictions were overturned in 2000 and Rowe who studied journalism while in prison became an investigative journalist for the BBC 102 103 104 In 1996 Kenneth Noye murdered Stephen Cameron in a road rage incident while stopped at traffic lights on an M25 junction in Kent He was convicted in 2000 and sentenced to life imprisonment 105 He was released in June 2019 106 107 In November 2014 during overnight roadworks a 16 foot 4 9 m piece of road surface near junction 9 at Leatherhead failed to set correctly due to rain This created a 1 foot 0 30 m pothole in the road and caused a 12 mile 19 km tailback The Minister for Transport John Hayes criticised the work and the resulting traffic problems 108 The M25 has had problems with animals and birds on the carriageway In 2009 the Highways Agency reported that they had been called out several times a week to remove a swan from the motorway around junction 13 109 There have been several crashes resulting in horses escaping their horseboxes onto the carriageway 110 111 112 Racing edit The motorway has attracted unofficial and illegal motor racing At the end of the 1980s before the advent of automated speed enforcement devices owners of supercars would meet at night at service stations such as South Mimms and conduct time trials 113 Times below 1 hour were achieved an average speed of over 117 mph 188 km h which included coming to a halt at the Dartford Tunnel road user charge payment booths 114 115 The winner received champagne rather than money The Enfield Gazette referred to an M25 club and posters appeared near the M25 advertising the First London Cannonball Run 113 The racing had mostly disappeared by the end of the 1980s after speed cameras were introduced 116 Insulate Britain protests edit Main article Insulate Britain protests In 2021 several sections of the M25 were disrupted after the home energy and insulation campaign group Insulate Britain blocked junctions including Nos 3 Swanley 6 Godstone 14 Heathrow 20 Kings Langley and 31 Lakeside A spokesman for the AA said the actions were counterproductive as they would cause increased vehicle emissions owing to delays as well having a negative effect on the economy 117 118 92 people were arrested following the first incident on 13 September followed by a further 70 two days later Insulate Britain said they would continue to disrupt the M25 until the government responded 119 On 29 October two days before the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference Insulate Britain protests blocked traffic from junctions 21 to 22 in Hertfordshire and 28 to 29 in Essex 19 arrests were made 120 Cultural references editThe M25 is a form of social control to ensure disruptive elements in society are neutralised by keeping a significant proportion of them in continual motion Will Self 121 The M25 and the Dartford Crossing are known for frequent traffic jams This was noticed before the entire road had been completed at the official opening ceremony Margaret Thatcher complained about those who carp and criticise The jams have inspired derogatory names such as Britain s Biggest Car Park 122 and songs e g Chris Rea s The Road to Hell 123 Nevertheless coach tours around the M25 have continued to run into the 21st century 124 The M25 plays a role in the comedy fantasy novel Good Omens as evidence for the hidden hand of Satan in the affairs of Man 16 The demon character Crowley had manipulated the design of the M25 to resemble a Satanic sigil and tried to ensure it would anger as many people as possible to drive them off the path of good 125 126 The lengthy series of public inquiries for motorways throughout the 1970s particularly the M25 influenced the opening of The Hitchhiker s Guide to the Galaxy where the Earth is destroyed to make way for a hyperspace bypass 127 The M25 enjoyed a more positive reputation among ravers in the late 1980s when this new orbital motorway became a popular route to the parties that took place around the outskirts of London 128 Its use for these raves inspired the name of the electronic duo Orbital 16 Iain Sinclair s 2002 book and film London Orbital is based on a year long journey around the M25 on foot 129 nbsp The Give Peas a chance graffiti on the Chalfont Viaduct before its removal in 2018A piece of graffiti on the Chalfont Viaduct clearly visible from the M25 and reading Give Peas a chance parodying John Lennon s Give Peace a Chance became popular with the public attracting its own Facebook group 130 131 The message originally read Peas supposedly the tag of a London graffiti artist the rest of the wording is reported to have referred to his frequent clashes with the law 132 133 In September 2018 after almost 20 years the graffiti was vandalised and then removed and replaced with the message Give Helch a break 134 A spokesman for Network Rail sympathised with the requests to restore the much loved graffiti but said they do not condone people putting their lives at risk by trespassing 134 135 Junctions and services editData from driver location signs provide carriageway identifier information 136 The numbers on the signs are kilometres from a point on the north side of the Dartford Crossing while the letter is A for the clockwise carriageway and B for the anticlockwise They are spaced every 500 metres 1 600 ft 27 The M25 has been criticised for having too many junctions 14 of them serve only local roads 37 137 In 2016 Edmund King president of the Automobile Association attributed congestion on the M25 to excessive junctions This leads to junction hoppers who only use the motorway for a short distance before exiting 138 their difference in speed when entering and leaving the main carriageway causes a domino effect resulting in all vehicles slowing down 139 Drivers who only use the M25 to travel a short distance are believed by some to have less overall driving experience exacerbating traffic and safety issues 138 The M25 originally opened without any service areas The first at South Mimms was opened by Margaret Thatcher in June 1987 a week before the election Thatcher admired the practical and no frills architecture of Charles Forte and praised him in her opening speech 140 The second Clacket Lane was opened by Robert Key Minister for Roads and Traffic on 21 July 1993 141 Construction was delayed as the remains of a Roman villa were found on the site requiring archaeological research 142 The other service area between junctions is Cobham which opened on 13 September 2012 25 A282 Dartford Crossing miles km 136 d Clockwise exits A carriageway 136 Junction Anti clockwise exits B carriageway Opening date 46 0 0 0 0 Dartford Crossing South Queen Elizabeth II Bridge nbsp RiverThames Dartford Crossing North Dartford Tunnels nbsp November 1963 west tunnel May 1980 east tunnel October 1991 bridge Entering Kent Entering Essex3 5 5 7 Swanscombe Erith Bluewater A206 J1A e Swanscombe Erith A206 September 19864 7 7 5 Dartford A225 J1B No Exit September 1986M255 5 8 8 London SE amp C Bexleyheath A2Canterbury M2 Ebbsfleet International nbsp Non Motorway Traffic J2 London SE amp C Bexleyheath Bluewater A2 Canterbury M2 Dartford A225 Ebbsfleet International nbsp September 1986 northbound April 1977 southbound 8 7 14 0 Dover Channel Tunnel Maidstone M20London SE Swanley A20 J3 London SE amp C Lewisham A20Channel Tunnel Maidstone M20 April 1977 northbound February 1986 southbound 12 2 19 6 Bromley A21Orpington A224 J4 London SE Bromley A21Orpington A224 February 198616 316 4 26 226 4 Sevenoaks Hastings A21 J5 Dover Channel Tunnel MaidstoneM26 M20 Sevenoaks Hastings A21 July 1980Entering Surrey Entering Kent21 0 33 8 Clacket Lane services Services Clacket Lane services July 199325 8 41 6 Eastbourne Godstone Caterham A22Redhill Westerham A25 J6 Eastbourne Godstone Caterham A22Westerham A25 November 1979 eastbound February 1976 westbound 28 6 46 0 Brighton CrawleyGatwick nbsp CroydonM23 J7 CroydonBrighton Gatwick nbsp M23 February 197631 9 51 4 Reigate Sutton A217Kingston A240 J8 Sutton Reigate A217 Redhill A25 February 1976 eastbound October 1985 westbound 38 539 5 62 063 5 Leatherhead A243Dorking A24 J9 Leatherhead A243Dorking A24 October 198542 643 2 68 669 5 Cobham services Services Cobham services September 201245 0 72 4 Portsmouth Guildford London SW amp C A3 J10 London SW Kingston Guildford PortsmouthA3 October 1985 eastbound December 1983 westbound 49 8 80 2 Woking A320Chertsey A317 J11 Chertsey A317Woking A320 December 1983 southbound October 1980 northbound 52 1 83 8 Basingstoke SouthamptonRichmondM3 J12 The SOUTH WEST SouthamptonLondon SW amp C RichmondM3 October 1980 southbound December 1976 northbound Entering Berkshire Entering SurreyEntering Surrey Entering Berkshire55 2 88 8 London W Hounslow Staines A30 J13 London W Hounslow Staines A30 November 1981 southbound August 1982 northbound Entering Greater London Entering Surrey57 0 91 8 Heathrow nbsp T 4 5 amp Cargo A3113 J14 Heathrow nbsp T4 5 and Cargo A3113 August 1982 southbound September 1985 northbound Entering Buckinghamshire Entering Greater London59 0 95 0 The WEST Reading SloughLondon W amp C Heathrow nbsp T1 2 amp 3 M4 J15 London W Heathrow nbsp T1 2 amp 3 The WEST Slough ReadingM4 September 198563 8 102 6 Birmingham OxfordUxbridge London W M40 J16 Uxbridge London W amp C Birmingham OxfordM40 September 1985 southbound January 1985 northbound Entering Hertfordshire Entering Buckinghamshire68 7 110 5 Rickmansworth Maple Cross A412 J17 Maple Cross A412 January 1985 southbound February 1976 northbound 69 9 112 5 Amersham Chorleywood A404 J18 Amersham Chorleywood Rickmansworth A404 February 197671 5 116 4 Watford A41 J19 No Exit September 197673 5 118 2 Hemel Hempstead Aylesbury A41 J20 Hemel Hempstead Aylesbury Watford A41 August 198676 3 122 8 The NORTHLuton amp Airport nbsp M1 J21 The NORTHLuton amp Airport nbsp M1 August 198676 9 123 7 M1 South St Albans London NW amp C A405 J21A M1 South St Albans London NW amp C Watford A405 August 198680 6 129 7 St Albans A1081 J22 St Albans A1081 August 198683 3 134 0 Hatfield A1 M London N amp C A1Barnet A1081South Mimms services J23 London N amp C A1Barnet A1081Hatfield A1 M South Mimms services August 1986 westbound September 1975 eastbound 85 9 138 2 Potters Bar A111 J24 Potters Bar A111 September 1975 westbound June 1981 eastbound Entering Greater London Entering Hertfordshire91 4 147 1 London N amp C Enfield Hertford A10 J25 London N amp C Enfield Hertford A10 June 1981 westbound January 1984 eastbound Entering Essex Entering Greater London94 9 152 7 Waltham Abbey Loughton A121 J26 Waltham Abbey Loughton A121 January 198499 2 159 7 Cambridge Stansted nbsp HarlowLondon N amp E M11 J27 London NE amp C Cambridge Harlow Stansted nbsp M11 January 1984 westbound April 1983 eastbound Entering Greater London Entering Essex107 1 172 4 Chelmsford London E amp C Romford A12 Brentwood A1023 J28 Chelmsford A12Brentwood A1023 April 1983Entering Essex Entering Greater LondonEntering Greater London Entering Essex 54 10 12 N 2 44 15 W 54 17005 N 2 73748 W 54 17005 2 73748109 9 176 8 Southend Southend Airport nbsp Basildon A127 J29 London E amp C Romford Southend Southend Airport nbsp Basildon A127 April 1983 northbound December 1982 southbound Entering Essex Entering Greater London115 2 185 4 Tilbury Thurrock Lakeside London E amp C A13Thurrock services J30 London E amp C Tilbury Thurrock Lakeside A13Thurrock servicesNon Motorway Traffic December 1982A282 Dartford Crossing 115 9 186 6 No Exit J31 Thurrock Lakeside A1306Purfleet A1090 West Thurrock A126 Thurrock services December 1982Dartford Crossing South Queen Elizabeth II Bridge nbsp RiverThames Dartford Crossing North Dartford Tunnels nbsp November 1963 west tunnel May 1980 east tunnel October 1991 bridge Entering Kent Entering EssexNotes 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 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Incomplete access TolledReferences editExplanatory notes edit a b Since the completion of the M25 the Berliner Ring has been completed to run at a slightly longer 196 km 122 mi 144 Pedestrians and cyclists cannot directly use the Dartford Crossing but a shuttle service is available for the latter 9 This move would be bound to be resisted by the communities affected including Watford Loughton and Epsom 17 The table gives details of each junction including the roads interchanged and the destinations that are signed from the motorway on the blue advance direction signs Figures in kilometres are from the driver location signs figures in miles are derived from them Junctions 1A and 1B are part of the A282 though they use the M25 s numbering scheme 143 Citations edit a b c AA Publishing 2019 Big Road Atlas Europe 2020 Map referred to in the London Borough of Havering Electoral Changes Order 2021 PDF The Local Government Boundary Commission for England 2021 Archived from the original PDF on 6 April 2022 Retrieved 27 October 2022 a b Heathrow Villages ward map PDF London Borough of Hillingdon 2022 Archived from the original PDF on 25 May 2022 Retrieved 27 October 2022 a b Hamilton 2015 p 24 Traffic Signs Manual Chapter 2 Primary Routes PDF Department of Transport Retrieved 14 May 2019 Tunnel Test 2004 Dartford Tunnel AA Motoring Trust September 2004 p 3 Archived from the original PDF on 8 January 2017 Retrieved 22 May 2010 Thames Bridges Heights Port of London Authority Retrieved 7 August 2016 Bishop Peter 2008 Bridge Reaktion Books p 26 ISBN 978 1 861 89346 8 Get across the Dartford crossing by bike HM Government Retrieved 13 May 2019 Walk on to cross the water Kent Online 23 August 2013 Retrieved 14 May 2019 M25 in South East Region The Motorway Archive 2009 Select M25 from list of motorways then M25 interchanges tunnels and bridges Retrieved 18 April 2013 a b c d 10 reasons why a lap of the M25 is Britain s ultimate road trip The Daily Telegraph 29 October 2016 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 28 May 2019 a b c Barkham Patrick 21 February 2012 Coach tour of the M25 a great day out The Guardian Retrieved 28 May 2019 Hamilton 2015 p 43 Calder Simon 25 September 2010 Trail of the unexpected The M25 The Independent Retrieved 28 May 2019 a b c d The M25 We re on the road to nowhere The Independent 17 October 2006 Retrieved 11 May 2019 Poll says M25 is London s natural boundary London Assembly 2 March 2004 Archived from the original on 9 October 2008 Communications Act 2003 The National Archives 2003 Retrieved 5 September 2011 Channel 4 Licence PDF Ofcom Retrieved 20 May 2019 United Nations Economic Commission for Europe 2016 p 11 Department for Transport January 2011 Road Network Policy Consultation PDF pp 13 14 Hamilton 2015 p 25 a b Business Plan 2013 14 PDF Highways Agency Archived from the original PDF on 15 May 2013 M25 MSA New Barn Farm Cobham Highways Agency Archived from the original on 3 March 2010 Retrieved 14 August 2010 a b Cobham M25 service station opened BBC News 13 September 2012 Retrieved 13 September 2012 Ridley Nicholas 6 February 1986 Roads Lighting and Signs Hansard Retrieved 13 May 2019 a b c Hamilton 2015 p 26 Bramley 1946 p 146 Smith 2001 p 148 John Henry Forshaw Sir Patrick Abercrombie 1943 County of London plan London County Council p 13 Hamilton 2015 p 19 a b c Asher 2018 p 113 Asher 2018 p 43 112 Asher 2018 p 103 Asher 2018 p 111 a b Asher 2018 p 116 a b Asher 2018 p 117 Asher 2018 p 118 a b Hamilton 2015 p 11 Moran 2009 pp 208 209 a b c Asher 2018 p 115 a b c d e M25 London Orbital Motorway Dates UK Motorway Archive Archived from the original on 3 August 2020 Calder Simon 25 September 2010 How London got its Ring Road The Independent Retrieved 11 May 2019 No 47053 The London Gazette 28 October 1976 pp 14527 14528 Asher 2018 p 119 a b c d Asher 2018 p 121 Asher 2018 p 120 M25 The best of Britain s most hated motorway The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 11 May 2019 a b Moran 2009 p 209 Hamilton 2015 p 14 a b Asher 2018 p 122 M25 Hansard 3 December 1990 UK Parliament 3 December 1990 Retrieved 19 July 2019 The bluffer s briefing on The M25 The Independent London 24 March 1993 Retrieved 12 May 2010 M25 Widening Parliamentary Debates Hansard 18 February 1993 Retrieved 19 July 2019 Webster Ben 25 June 2009 Rising costs put the brakes on dozens of roadbuilding projects The Times London Retrieved 12 May 2010 a b c Asher 2018 p 126 Wolmar Christian 4 April 1995 The roadblock that became a bandwagon The Independent London Retrieved 12 May 2010 Cohen Nick 2 April 1995 Pointless lies that reveal so much The Independent London Retrieved 12 May 2010 a b c Asher 2018 p 127 M25 scoop for Balfour in Surrey Construction News Retrieved 12 May 2019 Case Study M25 Controlled Motorway Highways Agency Archived from the original on 26 September 2012 Wolmar Christian 21 March 1997 Minister gives green light to widen M25 The Independent London Retrieved 12 May 2010 Plans to widen M25 to 12 lanes under attack Get Surrey Archived from the original on 14 June 2013 Retrieved 12 August 2020 BAA makes plans for Terminal 5 despite inquiry New Civil Engineer 6 August 1998 M25 Junctions 12 15 Widening Archived from the original on 17 March 2012 In 2003 Balfour Beatty Civil Engineering was awarded the 148 million contract to widen the 10 mile stretch of the M25 between Junction 12 the M3 Interchange and Junction 15 the M4 Interchange M25 Jct 12 to 15 Widening Highways Agency Archived from the original on 26 September 2008 75 Million Refurbishment for M25 Holmesdale Tunnel and Junction 25 Improvement work starts on Saturday 6 May Highways Agency Archived from the original on 6 November 2008 M25 Junction 25 Improvement Highways England Retrieved 13 May 2019 M25 Junction 28 A12 Brook Street Interchange Highways Agency Archived from the original on 26 September 2008 A12 junction to get major overhaul East Anglian Daily Times 5 December 2018 Retrieved 13 May 2019 Prequalification Document Highways Agency Archived from the original on 7 November 2008 Retrieved 20 January 2008 Highways Agency announces shortlist for 4 5bn M25 DBFO Contract Journal Archived from the original on 16 January 2016 Retrieved 20 January 2008 Andrea Klettner 16 January 2008 Highways Agency calls for M25 widening bids to be resubmitted Construction Journal Archived from the original on 12 August 2020 Retrieved 20 January 2008 Cost escalation hits M25 widening benefit to cost ratios New Civil Engineer 16 June 2009 Helm Toby 18 January 2009 Ministers scrap plan to widen motorways The Guardian London Retrieved 12 May 2010 Webster Ben 20 May 2009 PFI deal for M25 agreed despite price rise The Times London Retrieved 12 May 2010 6 2 billion M25 Design Build Finance and Operate DBFO contract awarded Highways Agency Archived from the original on 15 November 2009 M25 Jct 16 to 23 Widening Highways Agency Archived from the original on 10 September 2012 M25 widening to four lanes begins BBC News 8 July 2009 Retrieved 12 May 2010 Highways Agency Timetable Archived from the original on 26 September 2008 Weekly Summary of Roadworks in M25 Sphere 30 September 2009 Fleet Directory Archived from the original on 2 October 2009 Retrieved 11 October 2009 M25 Jct 27 to 30 Widening Highways Agency Archived from the original on 29 March 2012 M25 Junctions 5 to 7 Managed Motorways Highway Agency Archived from the original on 8 September 2012 Retrieved 11 October 2009 M25 Junctions 23 to 27 Managed Motorways Highways Agency Archived from the original on 17 August 2012 Retrieved 10 December 2008 M25 Junction 30 A13 corridor relieving congestion scheme Highways England 10 September 2017 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 M25 junction officially open after 100million upgrade Highways Industry 2 December 2016 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Fleming Eleanor 18 August 2020 RHS Wisley s last chance to save irreplaceable trees from M25 A3 scheme SurreyLive Retrieved 18 August 2020 Motorway traffic up 4 on 2003 BBC News 12 August 2004 Retrieved 3 January 2009 GB Road Traffic Counts data gov uk 29 May 2019 Archived from the original on 1 October 2019 Retrieved 19 July 2019 Connect Plus M25 Traffic Management WCCTV Retrieved 14 May 2019 Carillion Traffic Management Body Worn Cameras WCCTV Retrieved 14 May 2019 The M25 Motorway Junctions 10 to 15 Variable Speed Limits Regulations 1995 UK Statutory Instruments 15 May 1995 Retrieved 30 September 2022 Report HC 15 2004 05 Tackling congestion by making better use of England s motorways and trunk roads Full Report PDF Report National Audit Office 26 November 2004 p 21 Retrieved 17 September 2009 Morris Thom 14 May 2014 Dartford Crossing to get tunnel and bridge closures as Dart Charge introduced and gantries installed near QEII bridge Kent Messenger Retrieved 2 July 2014 Woodman Peter 22 May 2012 Dartford Thurrock River Crossing toll charges to rise The Independent Retrieved 13 July 2014 Dart Charge Transport for London Retrieved 14 May 2019 Dartford River Crossing Study into Capacity Requirement PDF Department for Transport 20 April 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 3 December 2009 Retrieved 26 April 2009 London to get new road tunnel under River Thames within decade promises Boris Johnson Daily Telegraph 12 January 2012 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 26 June 2013 Andrew Adonis 11 June 2013 Boris can t put off a new Thames crossing in the east London Evening Standard Retrieved 26 June 2013 Greenwich Council reaffirm backing of DLR extension to Thamesmead News Shopper 24 April 2019 Retrieved 6 December 2021 Surrey Constabulary Part 4 A Policing Revolution 1976 1992 Open University Retrieved 27 October 2019 Appeal court frees M25 Three BBC News 17 July 2000 Retrieved 2 September 2021 BBC One Panorama Raphael Rowe BBC Retrieved 2 September 2021 Hamilton 2015 p 15 Kenneth Noye Notorious M25 killer to be moved to open prison The Independent 8 August 2017 Retrieved 22 May 2019 M25 killer Kenneth Noye to be freed from prison BBC News 22 May 2019 Retrieved 22 May 2019 M25 killer Kenneth Noye released from prison BBC News 6 June 2019 Retrieved 19 July 2019 Hamilton 2015 p 27 Moran 2009 p 145 Horses break loose on motorway after horsebox crash on M25 London Evening Standard 8 August 2015 Retrieved 19 July 2019 Horses break free in Surrey M25 crash BBC News 8 August 2015 Retrieved 19 July 2019 A horse involved in a crash on the M25 was led to safety Kent Live 15 July 2018 Retrieved 19 July 2019 a b Moran 2009 p 163 May James 20 October 2007 Speed Greed And The M25 BBC Radio 4 Programme Information Network Radio Week 43 Press release BBC Press Office Moran 2009 p 164 M25 junctions blocked by Insulate Britain campaigners BBC News 13 September 2021 Retrieved 13 September 2021 Climate protesters arrested after blocking M25 junctions in rush hour The Guardian 13 September 2021 Retrieved 13 September 2021 Dozens arrested after protests bring M25 traffic to a halt again The Guardian 15 September 2021 Retrieved 15 September 2021 Insulate Britain protesters arrested walking on to M25 29 October 2021 Retrieved 6 December 2021 Hamilton 2015 p 6 M25 turns 30 Ten facts about Britain s Biggest Car Park ITV 29 October 2016 Retrieved 24 July 2019 Chris Rea interviewed by Will Hodgkinson The Guardian Friday 13 September 2002 London 13 September 2002 Retrieved 31 January 2009 M25 is UK s newest tourist attraction The Guardian 12 March 2012 Retrieved 21 May 2019 Pratchett Terry Gaiman Neil 1993 Good Omens London Corgi Books p 19 ISBN 0552137030 Neil Gaiman 11 April 2003 Neil Gaiman s Journal HarperCollins News Corp Retrieved 25 March 2017 Hamilton 2015 p 10 Castlemorton Common The rave that changed the law BBC News 28 May 2017 Retrieved 21 May 2019 Lezard Nicholas 21 September 2002 Meandering round the M25 The Guardian Give peas a chance M25 bridge graffiti removed BBC News 18 September 2018 Retrieved 29 May 2019 Give pease a chance graffiti on M25 Croydon Advertiser 22 July 2016 Retrieved 29 May 2019 The landmarks that mean you re nearly home BBC News 20 August 2017 Retrieved 29 May 2019 Graffiti campaigns that stuck in the mind BBC News Magazine 25 May 2011 Retrieved 29 May 2019 a b Petition calls for M25 give peas a chance graffiti return 21 September 2018 Retrieved 19 July 2019 Motorists devastated as iconic Give Peas A Chance M25 graffiti is erased London Evening Standard 20 September 2018 Retrieved 29 May 2019 a b c M25 Road Network Driver Location Signs PDF Highways Agency Archived from the original PDF on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 9 June 2009 Orbital Motorways Proceedings of the Conference Organized by the Institution of Civil Engineers and Held in Stratford upon Avon on 24 26 April 1990 Thomas Telford 1990 p 131 ISBN 978 0 727 71591 3 a b Moran 2005 p 99 Plan for smart junctions to end gridlock on the M25 London Evening Standard 11 April 2016 Retrieved 28 May 2019 Moran 2009 p 156 Baldwin et al 2002 p 938 Baldwin et al 2002 p 764 M25 roads org uk Retrieved 19 July 2019 Hamilton 2015 p 20 General and cited sources edit Asher Wayne 2018 Rings Around London Orbital motorways and the battle for homes before roads Capital History ISBN 978 1854144218 Baldwin Peter Bridle Ron Baldwin Robert Porter John 2002 The Motorway Achievement Volume 1 Thomas Telford ISBN 978 0 727 73196 8 Bramley J F 1946 Roads for Britain a digest of plans of future highways 2nd ed Staples Press Hamilton Ray 2015 M25 A Circular Tour of the London Orbital Summersdale Publishers ISBN 978 1 783 72656 1 Moran Joe 2005 Reading the Everyday Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 31709 2 Moran Joe 2009 On Roads A Hidden History Profile Books ISBN 978 1 846 68052 6 Smith Denis 2001 London and the Thames Valley Thomas Telford ISBN 978 0 727 72876 0 United Nations Economic Commission for Europe 1 November 2016 ECE TRANS SC 1 2016 3 Rev 1 European Agreement on Main International Traffic Arteries PDF Further reading editSinclair Iain 2002 London Orbital A Walk Around the M25 London Granta Books ISBN 1 86207 547 6 Phippen Roy 2005 Travelling M25 Clockwise London Pallas Athene ISBN 1 873429 90 8 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to M25 motorway KML file edit help Template Attached KML M25 motorwayKML is from Wikidata Highways Agency Roadworks Highways Agency Current Traffic Information Highways Agency Dartford Thurrock River Crossing The Motorway Archive s M25 page CBRD M25 Motorway Database CBRD M25 Opening Booklet Wonders of the M25 Londonist Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title M25 motorway amp oldid 1190390313, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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