Chiswick flyover explained

The Chiswick flyover is a short elevated section of the M4 motorway in the western approaches to London, United Kingdom. The flyover in the west London suburb of Chiswick, was opened in 1959 with the intention of reducing congestion and the impact on local traffic of vehicles travelling around London on the North and South Circular Roads and between London and the west on the Great West Road.[1] Although it was not originally built as a motorway, it was later incorporated into the M4 motorway.[2]

Description

The original Chiswick flyover carries the first half a mile of the M4 from its start at junction number 1. The flyover was extended to be over two miles long in the early 1960s, forming part of the M4 junction 1 to junction 5 section that was opened in 1965. The first one-and-a-half miles of the flyover tracks the course of the A4 which is directly beneath it, effectively forming a two-tier road system. It then turns approximately west north-west across Boston Manor Park before the M4 returns to ground level, and widens from two to three lanes in each direction as it heads west through the grounds of Osterley Park.

History

The flyover, built at a cost of £6 million, was provided to relieve the congestion at Chiswick Roundabout, the junction of Chiswick High Road, North Circular Road, South Circular Road and the Great West Road, caused by 40,000 cars per day using the junction. The opening ceremony for the flyover, which was performed by Hollywood actress Jayne Mansfield, took place on 30 September 1959.[3] The second section opened on 25 November 1964.[4]

In 1964 the flyover became part of the M4 motorway and by 1969 was said to be the most dangerous road in Britain. By 2009, 97,000 vehicles per day were using the M4 over flyover. In October 2009, actress Imogen Stubbs unveiled a plaque in a ceremony in Chiswick to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the opening of the flyover.

Design detail

The flyover was not originally built to motorway standards. The structure was half a mile long (0.8 kilometres) and 59abbr=offNaNabbr=off wide with hard-shoulders of no more than 4abbr=offNaNabbr=off wide.[2] of concrete went into each of the columns supporting the road.

Folklore

Rumours arose that the bodies of the victims of the Kray twins, notorious London gangsters, were entombed in the concrete pillars of the flyover.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The 'sweet little Chiswick Flyover' hits 50 . Nick . Curtis . 1 October 2009 . Evening Standard . 19 April 2013.
  2. Web site: The oldest motorway . The Motorway Archive Trust . 19 April 2013.
  3. News: Time And Cost Of Flyover Could Have Been Halved . . 1 October 1959 . 54580 . 6 . 1 March 2020.
  4. News: New Chiswick Flyover Section Opened . . 26 November 1964 . 56179 . 9 . 1 March 2020.