M80 | ||||
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Route information | ||||
Length | 25.0 mi (40.2 km) | |||
Existed | 1974–present | |||
History | Constructed 1974-2011 | |||
Major junctions | ||||
Southwest end | Glasgow Blochairn | |||
Northeast end | Stirling | |||
Section 1 | ||||
Major intersections | ![]() M8 motorway ![]() ![]() M73 motorway ![]() ![]() M876 motorway ![]() ![]() M9 motorway Junction 9 | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United Kingdom | |||
Primary destinations | Stirling,Cumbernauld,Glasgow | |||
Road network | ||||
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TheM80 is amotorway inScotland'scentral belt, running betweenGlasgow andStirling viaCumbernauld andDenny and linking theM8,M73 andM9 motorways. Following completion in 2011, the motorway is 25 miles (40 km) long. Despite being only a two lane motorway, parts of the M80 Stepps Bypass are used by around 60,000 vehicles per day.[1]
The M80 was constructed in three sections. The first section, from the village ofHaggs to the M9 near Stirling, opened in 1974, followed in 1992 by the section from the M8 to the town ofStepps. The section from Stepps to Haggs was completed in September 2011, though it partially opened in February 2011 when theMoodiesburn bypass, from Stepps to the M73 atMollinsburn, was completed; the section of theA80 from Mollinsburn to Haggs was then upgraded.[2]
This section of road was originally envisioned during the M8's construction in the 1960s, but was not realised until 1992,[3] and is also known as the 'Stepps Bypass'. It begins at M8 junction 13 in the Glasgow suburb of Blochairn. Construction began in 1990.
It runs to the north of Stepps, under theCumbernauld Railway Line with exits forBishopbriggs,Lenzie andKirkintilloch, where it continues onto the new section, completed in 2011.
The Stepps to Haggs section was completed in September 2011, completing the M80 route.
A short section of offline upgrade takes the route from the former terminus at junction 3 (Stepps), to a new junction with the M73. After this, the route follows an on-line upgrade of the formerA80 through Cumbernauld. It is mainly two-lane dual carriageway.
At the junction with theA803, the road rejoins the older section of the M80 (opened in 1974[4]) and runs for about 1 mile (1.6 km)[5] until it meets theM876 for traffic towards theKincardine Bridge.
The M80 then continues north, passing to the west ofDenny and after 5 miles (8.0 km) meets a junction with theA91 (the same roundabout interchange also hostsStirling Services) and then merges into the M9 just outside Stirling atBannockburn.[5]
The M80 Stepps to Haggs Completion Project connected the two-halves of the current motorway via an online upgrade of the existing A80, passing throughCumbernauld and Auchenkilns, and the offline creation of new motorway from Stepps toMollinsburn. Although various plans were considered from the 1970s to 1990s[6] to connect the two sections of motorway, it was not until 2003 that a definitive timeline for proposing, developing and executing a completion plan was announced.[7]
Two routes were proposed for development: the so-called Kelvin Valley route, which would create a bypass to the north of the existing line of the A80, and the "online" upgrade of the existing A80 to motorway grade. In October 2005, the project was put to a public inquiry, which ended in August 2006. The Kelvin Valley route was not chosen[8] as it would have breached theAntonine Wall and destroyed theCastlecaryRomanfort;[9] instead the online upgrade of the A80 through Cumbernauld was selected.[8]
Originally budgeted to cost £130–180 million,[7] but as of August 2010[update] was estimated to cost £320 million,[10] preparatory works were started in November 2008, and construction work began in January 2009.[11] The project was completed in September 2011.
The upgrade plans were set into three discrete phases.[12] Phase one involved the creation of 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) of road from Stepps, routing north ofMuirhead,Moodiesburn andChryston, and meeting the line of the existing A80 at Mollinsburn with the construction of a new interchange, connecting the M80 with theM73 and the western section of the A80. Phase two required the online upgrade of the A80 between Mollinsburn and Auchenkilns, with the attendant upgrade of adjoining on-slip and off-slip roads, meeting the Auchenkilns Interchange. The interchange was opened in November 2005 after the onlinegrade separation of the Auchenkilns Roundabout from the line of the dual carriageway created a grade separateddumbbell interchange, linking the A80 (and subsequently the M80) with theA73 and B8048.[13][14] Phase three saw the A80 upgraded online from Auchenkilns to the Haggs Interchange east of Cumbernauld – also seeing some junctions being upgraded, but with some being removed –[15] completing the connection of the western M80 to the eastern M80, and connecting to theM876 andM9 motorways. The M80 crosses theGlasgow to Edinburgh via Falkirk railway line andForth and Clyde Canal.
County | Location | mi | km | Junction | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Glasgow | Glasgow | 0 | 0 | 1[coord 1] | ![]() | |
1.7 | 2.7 | 2[coord 2] | B765-Bishopbriggs | |||
North Lanarkshire | Moodiesburn | 3.5 | 5.6 | 3[coord 3] | ![]() | |
6.9 | 11.0 | 4[coord 4] | Moodiesburn,Cumbernauld | No Eastbound entrance or Westbound exit | ||
7.3 | 11.8 | —[coord 5] | ![]() | No Westbound entrance or Eastbound exit | ||
Cumbernauld | 9.0 | 14.5 | 4a[coord 6] | ![]() | No Westbound entrance or Eastbound exit | |
9.4 | 15.1 | 5[coord 7] | ![]() | |||
11.6 | 18.7 | 6[coord 8] | ![]() B816-Castlecary | |||
Falkirk | — | 13.3 | 21.4 | 6a[coord 9] | B816-Castlecary,Allandale | No Southbound entrance or Northbound exit |
13.9 | 22.3 | 7[coord 10] | ![]() | |||
Denny | 15.2 | 24.4 | 8[coord 11] | ![]() | No Northbound entrance or Southbound exit | |
Stirling | — | 20.6 | 33.1 | 9[coord 12] | ![]() ![]() ![]() | |
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi |