Britain | Road to hell

Britain’s dimmed love affair with motorways

Britons found the M25 even more irritating shut than open

Slow moving traffic on M25 motorway at night, London, England.
Round and round we goPhotograph: Getty Images
|Junction 11, the M25|3 min read

By 9pm on March 15th, atop a boring-looking bridge above the M25, a small crowd has gathered. Junction 11 is rarely a popular choice for a Friday night out. Indeed the M25 is rarely popular at all. The road—which encircles London and is Britain’s busiest—is also one of its most loathed. Chris Rea, a musician, wrote a song called “Road to Hell” about it; Terry Pratchett, an author, argued that its mere existence was evidence of Satan’s own. The news that it was—for the first time ever—going to close during the daytime so that a bridge could be demolished was received by many as just the sort of irritating thing that the M25 would do.

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This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Road to hell”

From the March 23rd 2024 edition

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