A580 road
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Image:UK road A580.PNG | |
Length (miles) | 29.5 |
---|---|
Length (km) | 48.5 |
Direction | West - East |
Start | Walton, Liverpool |
Primary destinations |
St Helens Leigh |
End | Irlams o'th' Heights, Salford(A6) |
Construction began | 29th April. 1929 |
Construction ended | 1934 |
Roads joined | A5058 M57 A5300 A59 A5207 A5208 A570 A571 A58 A49 M6 A573 A572 A579 A574 A577 A575 M61 M60 A5185 A666 A6 |
The A580 is a road that connects Manchester and Liverpool or the Liverpool-East Lancashire Road (abbreviated to and known commonly as East Lancs Road) was designed and built to provide better access to the Port of Liverpool for East Lancashire and Manchester, in England. It was the UK's first purpose-built intercity highway and was officially opened by King George V on 18 July 1934.
The road runs from Walton in Liverpool to join the A6 at Irlams o'th' Heights in Salford, and was designed to eventually have triple highways, although in the event it was upgraded later to dual-carriageway: the section within the Liverpool boundary had always been thus. The upgrading resulted in separation of the two carriageways: the first occasion this had been done in Britain. It achieved its name since it was originally intended to reach East Lancashire, although this was never carried out: that intended portion has now been superseded by the M62 motorway.
[edit] External links
A roads in Zone 5 of the Great Britain road numbering system |
||
A5 | A50 - A51 - A52 - A53 - A54 - A55 - A56 - A57 - A58 - A59 | |
A500 - A501 - A505 - A508 - A509 - A511 - A512 - A514 - A518 - A519 | ||
A525 - A528 - A530 - A533 - A556 - A562 - A563 - A565 - A570 - A574 - A580 - A583 | ||
A590 - A591 -A592 - A594 - A595 - A596 - | ||
A5012 - A5025 - A5036 - A5038 | ||
A5103 - A5112 - A5117 - A5124 - A5127 - A5130 | ||
A5183 - A5199 - A5300 | ||
List of A roads in Zone 5 |