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M90 motorway

The M90 is a motorway in Scotland. It runs from Junction 1A of the M9 motorway, south of the Queensferry Crossing,[2] to Perth. It is the northernmost motorway in the United Kingdom. The northern point goes to the western suburbs of Perth at Broxden. A small part of the M90 (across the Friarton Bridge to the southeast of Perth) was originally numbered as the M85 motorway.

M90
Route information
Part of E15
Length36 mi (58 km)
Existed1964–present
HistoryConstructed 1964–2017[1]
Major junctions
South endJunction 1a of the M9
Major intersections
M9 motorway

A823(M) motorway
North endPerth (two ends; one east 56°22′58″N 3°24′23″W / 56.3827°N 3.4065°W / 56.3827; -3.4065 (M90 motorway (northern end)), one at Broxden Junction 56°23′18″N 3°29′13″W / 56.3882°N 3.4869°W / 56.3882; -3.4869 (M90 motorway (northern end)))
Location
CountryUnited Kingdom
Primary
destinations
Edinburgh, Edinburgh Airport, Forth Road Bridge, Dunfermline, Kinross, Perth
Road network
M80 M180

History edit

The first section of the M90 opened in 1964 to coincide with the opening of the Forth Road Bridge and Masterton junction (Junction 2). The next section of the M90, the Crossgates – Kelty and Cowdenbeath Bypass, opened on 1 December 1969.[3] The stretch between Kinross and the Milnathort Bypass opened in December 1971.[4]

Two sections were due to begin construction around 1973 and 1974, however, they were put on hold because of the 1973 oil crisis. The section from Arlary (Junction 8 with A91) to Arngask was opened in March 1977. Arngask (Glenfarg) to Muirmont opened in 2nd October 1980[5] connecting with the completed Friarton Bridge (which was originally numbered M85, and opened in 1976[6]) and Perth Bypass to Broxden.

The M90 was extended southwards across the Firth of Forth over a new cable-stayed bridge, the Queensferry Crossing, in 2017. A short stretch of the A90 connects the two parts of M90: the short M90 section from the M9 and the much longer M90 section that crosses the Queensferry Crossing and extends to Perth. This short length of the A90 was required at this point as motorway regulations would have prevented certain classes of traffic from using this section of road.[7][8]

Details edit

 
M90, North of Kelty at the boundary between Fife and Perth and Kinross

The M90 leaves the east-west M9 near Kirkliston and heads north. The motorway is interrupted by a short stretch of the A90 from where the A90 from Edinburgh joins the M90. The road continues, however the M90 during this stretch is called the A90. Once it reaches the junction to the south of the Queensferry Crossing the A90 becomes the M90 again at that point. The crossing opened as part of the motorway on 30 August 2017; the bridge is configured as a dual two lane carriageway and has a speed limit of 70 mph (110 km/h).[9]

Previously, the M90's most substantial engineering feature was the Friarton Bridge in Perth, a tall concrete pillared structure which traverses the River Tay. The bridge carries eastbound traffic from Broxden towards Dundee and along the Firth of Tay.

The road constitutes most of the southerly part of the A90 corridor from Edinburgh, through Perth, Dundee and Aberdeen to Peterhead along Scotland's North Sea coast.

A large part of the northern section of the motorway follows the route of the former main railway line between Perth and Edinburgh via Glenfarg, Kinross and the Forth Bridge, which was closed in 1970 despite this not being recommended by the Beeching report.

The Kinross and Milnathort Bypass, the 8-mile (13 km) section of the M90 between Fruix and Arlary, was the first motorway in Britain to be constructed using concrete pavements that were not reinforced.[10] Both the south- and north-bound carriageways have since been overlaid by tarmac.

 
A sharp turn present on the M90

Near to its northern terminus, the motorway splits into two branches. The construction of this three-way interchange required the removal of approximately 900,000 cubic metres (32,000,000 cubic feet) of material, which was mostly rock. The motorway bends through in an acute angle, on a compound curve partly of 520.8 m (1,709 ft) and partly of 694.5 m (2,279 ft) in its radius. One branch heads in a north-easterly direction, flowing into the A90 at its end, numbered junction 11 – this branch was formerly the M85 motorway, until the A85 was renumbered as A90. The other branch forms part of the western bypass of Perth, and meets the A9 at its end, numbered junction 12.[11] The gradient is 4.57% uphill and 5.65% downhill on this section. The slip roads forming this branch merge with shared priority to allow HGVs (also known as Large Good Vehicles or Heavy Goods Vehicles) to maintain momentum on the steep upgrade. The Broxden to Muirmont slip road at the centre of the interchange has a radius of 136.4 m (448 ft), necessitating maximum superelevation of 7%.

The M90 forms part of the Euroroute E15 which runs from Inverness to Algeciras, however this is not signposted within the UK.

Issues edit

The M90 lacks hard shoulders for an 8-mile (13 km) section. In this section there are emergency lay-bys (rest areas) at 14-mile (400 m) intervals instead.

The M90 here has another of the tightest corners on the UK motorway network,[12] for which some traffic can be forced to slow down. The corner cuts through the northern side of the Ochil Hills and has a curve radius of 694.5 m (2,279 ft). A recommended minimum of 914 m (2,999 ft) was standard at the time of construction. This corner also coincides with one of the steepest sections of the motorway,[12] for which north-bound HGVs are sign-posted to stay in a low gear and often brake continuously through the turn. South-bound HGVs are normally substantially reduced in speed as they make the incline.

Junctions edit

County Location mi km Junction Destinations Notes
Edinburgh 0 0 [coord 1]   M9 – Edinburgh, Stirling
Queensferry 2.6 4.1 1[coord 2]   A90 – Edinburgh no Eastbound exit or Southbound entrance
4.0 6.5 1a[coord 3]   A904 – Queensferry, Newton
Fife 6.7 10.8 1b Ferrytoll [coord 4]   A9000 – Queensferry
B981- Inverkeithing, Rosyth Dockyard
Rosyth 7.7 12.4 1c[coord 5]   A985 – Rosyth, Kincardine
B921- Hillend, Kirkaldy
8.2 13.2 2[coord 6]   A823(M)– Rosyth, Dunfermline
Dunfermline 10.6 17.1 2a Crossgates [coord 7]   A92 – Glenrothes no Northbound entrance or Southbound exit
11.3 18.2 3 Halbeath [coord 8]   A92 – Glenrothes
  A907 - Dunfermline
14.9 23.9 4[coord 9] B914- Kelty
Perth and Kinross 17.6 28.3 5[coord 10] B9097- Crook of Devon
Kinross 20.7 33.3 6[coord 11]   A977 – Kinross, Crook of Devon
21.9 35.2 7[coord 12]   A91 – Milnathort, Stirling no Southbound entrance or Northbound exit
24.1 38.8 8[coord 13]   A91 – St Andrews no Northbound entrance or Southbound exit
Bridge of Earn 32.5 52.3 9[coord 14]   A912 – Bridge of Earn, Gateside
34.7 55.8 10[coord 15]   A912 - Perth Motorway splits into two, southbound entrance and Northbound exit only for A912
Perth 36.0 58.0 11[coord 16]   A90 – Dundee
  A85 – Perth, Oban
On the Eastern branch after the split
60.4 37.5 12[coord 17]   A9 - Stirling, Inverness
  A93 – perth
On the Western branch after the split
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
Coordinate list
  1. ^ 55°57′18″N 3°25′05″W / 55.955°N 3.418°W / 55.955; -3.418 (Junction 1a of M9)
  2. ^ 55°58′41″N 3°23′02″W / 55.978°N 3.384°W / 55.978; -3.384 (Junction 1 of M90)
  3. ^ 55°59′02″N 3°25′19″W / 55.984°N 3.422°W / 55.984; -3.422 (Junction 1a of M90)
  4. ^ 56°01′16″N 3°24′25″W / 56.021°N 3.407°W / 56.021; -3.407 (Junction 1b of M90)
  5. ^ 56°02′10″N 3°24′29″W / 56.036°N 3.408°W / 56.036; -3.408 (Junction 1c of M90)
  6. ^ 56°02′35″N 3°24′18″W / 56.043°N 3.405°W / 56.043; -3.405 (Junction 2 of M90)
  7. ^ 56°04′19″N 3°23′20″W / 56.072°N 3.389°W / 56.072; -3.389 (Junction 2a of M90)
  8. ^ 56°04′52″N 3°23′49″W / 56.081°N 3.397°W / 56.081; -3.397 (Junction 3 of M90)
  9. ^ 56°07′44″N 3°23′38″W / 56.129°N 3.394°W / 56.129; -3.394 (Junction 4 of M90)
  10. ^ 56°10′01″N 3°24′14″W / 56.167°N 3.404°W / 56.167; -3.404 (Junction 5 of M90)
  11. ^ 56°12′29″N 3°26′10″W / 56.208°N 3.436°W / 56.208; -3.436 (Junction 6 of M90)
  12. ^ 56°13′30″N 3°25′59″W / 56.225°N 3.433°W / 56.225; -3.433 (Junction 7 of M90)
  13. ^ 56°14′20″N 3°23′28″W / 56.239°N 3.391°W / 56.239; -3.391 (Junction 8 of M90)
  14. ^ 56°20′31″N 3°23′49″W / 56.342°N 3.397°W / 56.342; -3.397 (Junction 9 of M90)
  15. ^ 56°22′05″N 3°25′23″W / 56.368°N 3.423°W / 56.368; -3.423 (Junction 10 of M90)
  16. ^ 56°23′02″N 3°24′18″W / 56.384°N 3.405°W / 56.384; -3.405 (Junction 11 of M90)
  17. ^ 56°23′17″N 3°29′10″W / 56.388°N 3.486°W / 56.388; -3.486 (Junction 12 of M90)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 July 2013. Retrieved 28 May 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ . Transport Scotland. Archived from the original on 29 October 2014. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  3. ^ Edinburgh Gazette issue 18827
  4. ^ "M90 Kinross and Milnathort Bypass | Roads.org.uk". www.roads.org.uk. 13 December 1971. Retrieved 23 April 2024.
  5. ^ New era as M9O stretch opens By BRIAN McCARTNEY P11, 3 Friday October 1980: The Scotsman
  6. ^ Giles, Graeme (18 January 1994). "End of the road for the M85 motorway". Perthshire Advertiser. Retrieved 14 April 2021.
  7. ^ . 27 November 2012. Archived from the original on 6 April 2015. Retrieved 18 March 2013.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 June 2013. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  9. ^ Carrell, Severin; agency (30 August 2017). "Queensferry Crossing across the Firth of Forth opens to traffic". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  10. ^ . The Motorway Archive. Archived from the original on 8 August 2016. Retrieved 18 December 2015.
  11. ^ M90 J12 Broxden, sabre-roads.org.uk (retrieved 2013-01-16)
  12. ^ a b "M90 | Roads.org.uk". www.roads.org.uk. 4 September 1964. Retrieved 8 August 2023.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  • Scottish Roads Archive - M90
  • CBRD Motorway Database - M90
  • Pathetic Motorways - M90
  • Pathetic Motorways - M85

motorway, motorway, redirects, here, road, hungary, expressway, hungary, this, article, tone, style, reflect, encyclopedic, tone, used, wikipedia, wikipedia, guide, writing, better, articles, suggestions, august, 2013, learn, when, remove, this, template, mess. M85 motorway redirects here For the road in Hungary see M85 expressway Hungary This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions August 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The M90 is a motorway in Scotland It runs from Junction 1A of the M9 motorway south of the Queensferry Crossing 2 to Perth It is the northernmost motorway in the United Kingdom The northern point goes to the western suburbs of Perth at Broxden A small part of the M90 across the Friarton Bridge to the southeast of Perth was originally numbered as the M85 motorway M90Route informationPart of E15Length36 mi 58 km Existed1964 presentHistoryConstructed 1964 2017 1 Major junctionsSouth endJunction 1a of the M9Major intersectionsM9 motorway A823 M motorwayNorth endPerth two ends one east 56 22 58 N 3 24 23 W 56 3827 N 3 4065 W 56 3827 3 4065 M90 motorway northern end one at Broxden Junction 56 23 18 N 3 29 13 W 56 3882 N 3 4869 W 56 3882 3 4869 M90 motorway northern end LocationCountryUnited KingdomPrimarydestinationsEdinburgh Edinburgh Airport Forth Road Bridge Dunfermline Kinross PerthRoad networkRoads in the United Kingdom Motorways A and B road zones M80 M180 Contents 1 History 2 Details 3 Issues 4 Junctions 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editThe first section of the M90 opened in 1964 to coincide with the opening of the Forth Road Bridge and Masterton junction Junction 2 The next section of the M90 the Crossgates Kelty and Cowdenbeath Bypass opened on 1 December 1969 3 The stretch between Kinross and the Milnathort Bypass opened in December 1971 4 Two sections were due to begin construction around 1973 and 1974 however they were put on hold because of the 1973 oil crisis The section from Arlary Junction 8 with A91 to Arngask was opened in March 1977 Arngask Glenfarg to Muirmont opened in 2nd October 1980 5 connecting with the completed Friarton Bridge which was originally numbered M85 and opened in 1976 6 and Perth Bypass to Broxden The M90 was extended southwards across the Firth of Forth over a new cable stayed bridge the Queensferry Crossing in 2017 A short stretch of the A90 connects the two parts of M90 the short M90 section from the M9 and the much longer M90 section that crosses the Queensferry Crossing and extends to Perth This short length of the A90 was required at this point as motorway regulations would have prevented certain classes of traffic from using this section of road 7 8 Details edit nbsp M90 North of Kelty at the boundary between Fife and Perth and Kinross The M90 leaves the east west M9 near Kirkliston and heads north The motorway is interrupted by a short stretch of the A90 from where the A90 from Edinburgh joins the M90 The road continues however the M90 during this stretch is called the A90 Once it reaches the junction to the south of the Queensferry Crossing the A90 becomes the M90 again at that point The crossing opened as part of the motorway on 30 August 2017 the bridge is configured as a dual two lane carriageway and has a speed limit of 70 mph 110 km h 9 Previously the M90 s most substantial engineering feature was the Friarton Bridge in Perth a tall concrete pillared structure which traverses the River Tay The bridge carries eastbound traffic from Broxden towards Dundee and along the Firth of Tay The road constitutes most of the southerly part of the A90 corridor from Edinburgh through Perth Dundee and Aberdeen to Peterhead along Scotland s North Sea coast A large part of the northern section of the motorway follows the route of the former main railway line between Perth and Edinburgh via Glenfarg Kinross and the Forth Bridge which was closed in 1970 despite this not being recommended by the Beeching report The Kinross and Milnathort Bypass the 8 mile 13 km section of the M90 between Fruix and Arlary was the first motorway in Britain to be constructed using concrete pavements that were not reinforced 10 Both the south and north bound carriageways have since been overlaid by tarmac nbsp A sharp turn present on the M90 Near to its northern terminus the motorway splits into two branches The construction of this three way interchange required the removal of approximately 900 000 cubic metres 32 000 000 cubic feet of material which was mostly rock The motorway bends through in an acute angle on a compound curve partly of 520 8 m 1 709 ft and partly of 694 5 m 2 279 ft in its radius One branch heads in a north easterly direction flowing into the A90 at its end numbered junction 11 this branch was formerly the M85 motorway until the A85 was renumbered as A90 The other branch forms part of the western bypass of Perth and meets the A9 at its end numbered junction 12 11 The gradient is 4 57 uphill and 5 65 downhill on this section The slip roads forming this branch merge with shared priority to allow HGVs also known as Large Good Vehicles or Heavy Goods Vehicles to maintain momentum on the steep upgrade The Broxden to Muirmont slip road at the centre of the interchange has a radius of 136 4 m 448 ft necessitating maximum superelevation of 7 The M90 forms part of the Euroroute E15 which runs from Inverness to Algeciras however this is not signposted within the UK Issues editThe M90 lacks hard shoulders for an 8 mile 13 km section In this section there are emergency lay bys rest areas at 1 4 mile 400 m intervals instead The M90 here has another of the tightest corners on the UK motorway network 12 for which some traffic can be forced to slow down The corner cuts through the northern side of the Ochil Hills and has a curve radius of 694 5 m 2 279 ft A recommended minimum of 914 m 2 999 ft was standard at the time of construction This corner also coincides with one of the steepest sections of the motorway 12 for which north bound HGVs are sign posted to stay in a low gear and often brake continuously through the turn South bound HGVs are normally substantially reduced in speed as they make the incline Junctions editCounty Location mi km Junction Destinations Notes Edinburgh 0 0 coord 1 nbsp M9 Edinburgh Stirling Queensferry 2 6 4 1 1 coord 2 nbsp A90 Edinburgh no Eastbound exit or Southbound entrance 4 0 6 5 1a coord 3 nbsp A904 Queensferry Newton Fife 6 7 10 8 1b Ferrytoll coord 4 nbsp A9000 QueensferryB981 Inverkeithing Rosyth Dockyard Rosyth 7 7 12 4 1c coord 5 nbsp A985 Rosyth KincardineB921 Hillend Kirkaldy 8 2 13 2 2 coord 6 nbsp A823 M Rosyth Dunfermline Dunfermline 10 6 17 1 2a Crossgates coord 7 nbsp A92 Glenrothes no Northbound entrance or Southbound exit 11 3 18 2 3 Halbeath coord 8 nbsp A92 Glenrothes nbsp A907 Dunfermline 14 9 23 9 4 coord 9 B914 Kelty Perth and Kinross 17 6 28 3 5 coord 10 B9097 Crook of Devon Kinross 20 7 33 3 6 coord 11 nbsp A977 Kinross Crook of Devon 21 9 35 2 7 coord 12 nbsp A91 Milnathort Stirling no Southbound entrance or Northbound exit 24 1 38 8 8 coord 13 nbsp A91 St Andrews no Northbound entrance or Southbound exit Bridge of Earn 32 5 52 3 9 coord 14 nbsp A912 Bridge of Earn Gateside 34 7 55 8 10 coord 15 nbsp A912 Perth Motorway splits into two southbound entrance and Northbound exit only for A912 Perth 36 0 58 0 11 coord 16 nbsp A90 Dundee nbsp A85 Perth Oban On the Eastern branch after the split 60 4 37 5 12 coord 17 nbsp A9 Stirling Inverness nbsp A93 perth On the Western branch after the split1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Incomplete access Coordinate list 55 57 18 N 3 25 05 W 55 955 N 3 418 W 55 955 3 418 Junction 1a of M9 55 58 41 N 3 23 02 W 55 978 N 3 384 W 55 978 3 384 Junction 1 of M90 55 59 02 N 3 25 19 W 55 984 N 3 422 W 55 984 3 422 Junction 1a of M90 56 01 16 N 3 24 25 W 56 021 N 3 407 W 56 021 3 407 Junction 1b of M90 56 02 10 N 3 24 29 W 56 036 N 3 408 W 56 036 3 408 Junction 1c of M90 56 02 35 N 3 24 18 W 56 043 N 3 405 W 56 043 3 405 Junction 2 of M90 56 04 19 N 3 23 20 W 56 072 N 3 389 W 56 072 3 389 Junction 2a of M90 56 04 52 N 3 23 49 W 56 081 N 3 397 W 56 081 3 397 Junction 3 of M90 56 07 44 N 3 23 38 W 56 129 N 3 394 W 56 129 3 394 Junction 4 of M90 56 10 01 N 3 24 14 W 56 167 N 3 404 W 56 167 3 404 Junction 5 of M90 56 12 29 N 3 26 10 W 56 208 N 3 436 W 56 208 3 436 Junction 6 of M90 56 13 30 N 3 25 59 W 56 225 N 3 433 W 56 225 3 433 Junction 7 of M90 56 14 20 N 3 23 28 W 56 239 N 3 391 W 56 239 3 391 Junction 8 of M90 56 20 31 N 3 23 49 W 56 342 N 3 397 W 56 342 3 397 Junction 9 of M90 56 22 05 N 3 25 23 W 56 368 N 3 423 W 56 368 3 423 Junction 10 of M90 56 23 02 N 3 24 18 W 56 384 N 3 405 W 56 384 3 405 Junction 11 of M90 56 23 17 N 3 29 10 W 56 388 N 3 486 W 56 388 3 486 Junction 12 of M90 See also editList of motorways in the United KingdomReferences edit Archived copy Archived from the original on 25 July 2013 Retrieved 28 May 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link FRC Bus Lane Map Transport Scotland Archived from the original on 29 October 2014 Retrieved 29 October 2014 Edinburgh Gazette issue 18827 M90 Kinross and Milnathort Bypass Roads org uk www roads org uk 13 December 1971 Retrieved 23 April 2024 New era as M9O stretch opens By BRIAN McCARTNEY P11 3 Friday October 1980 The Scotsman Giles Graeme 18 January 1994 End of the road for the M85 motorway Perthshire Advertiser Retrieved 14 April 2021 Scotland gets it first Managed Motorway 27 November 2012 Archived from the original on 6 April 2015 Retrieved 18 March 2013 FRC junction opens early and under budget Transport Scotland Archived from the original on 7 June 2013 Retrieved 24 July 2013 Carrell Severin agency 30 August 2017 Queensferry Crossing across the Firth of Forth opens to traffic The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 30 July 2020 M90 Inverkeithing to Perth and M85 Perth by pass The Motorway Archive Archived from the original on 8 August 2016 Retrieved 18 December 2015 M90 J12 Broxden sabre roads org uk retrieved 2013 01 16 a b M90 Roads org uk www roads org uk 4 September 1964 Retrieved 8 August 2023 External links editKML file edit help Template Attached KML M90 motorwayKML is from Wikidata Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Scottish Roads Archive M90 CBRD Motorway Database M90 The Motorway Archive M90 Pathetic Motorways M90 Pathetic Motorways M85 Diagram of Fife M90 Approaches to Queensferry Crossing Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title M90 motorway amp oldid 1220401525, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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