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Britain's first motorways opened just over 50 years ago, heralding a new form of efficient high-speed surface transport. They have since grown to a national network of 3500 km which now carries 37% of the UK's overland freight traffic. However, motorway development has all but ground to a halt over the past two decades and there are no plans to build any more. This paper reports on the history of the motorway-building programme in the UK and the lessons learnt by the civil engineering profession. It concludes that a new and more positive policy for national road transport is needed.
2010 © The authors and the Institution of Civil Engineers
2010
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