Original M74 – 1960s The
A74 was the original route from Glasgow to
Carlisle, where it met the
A7 in Carlisle city centre and the
A6 south to London. Starting in the 1930s, the single-carriageway road between
Gretna and Glasgow was progressively upgraded to dual carriageway, being completed in the early 1970s with the completion of the Gretna bypass. At the northern end, it was not possible simply to add to the existing carriageway because of the built-up nature of the area. A bypass was built as one of Scotland's first motorways, the M74, from Draffan to Maryville, north of Uddingston, completed by 1969. Junctions were originally numbered from south to north, which was the normal convention at the time numbers increasing going away from London, as there were no plans to extend the motorway. The northern section around Hamilton was built as three-lane dual carriageway, narrowing to two-lane dual carriageway south of junction 4. It continued as the A74 dual-carriageway from Draffan and carrying on to link with the M6 junction 44 at Carlisle.
First extension (1984–1987) The southern sections, where there was no need to bypass the existing route, were not originally upgraded to motorway standard, but to dual carriageway without hard shoulders or full grade separation. The gradual construction of the
M6 from Rugby (where it met the M1 to London) to Carlisle in 1970, where it terminated on the A74, meant that the route from Glasgow to London was entirely dual carriageway. This led to calls for the already dualled A74 from Draffan to the M6 to be upgraded a second time, to motorway standard. As the government had already invested in the dual carriageway upgrade, they initially resisted these calls. In 1972 the Government agreed to extend the M74 from Draffan to today's junction 12 at Millbank. It was built in three sections, opening 1986–87. It was constructed to dual two-lane standard, and included a bypass of
Lesmahagow, as the M74. In 1984, in preparation for the southwards extension, the junction numbers were changed to go from north to south, Raith (junction 5) on the original south to north numbering remained as junction 5, with Maryville (the most northerly junction at that time) becoming junction 4, leaving lesser numbers available for junctions for the expected continuation of the motorway northwards. When the first southern extension opened, Draffan, originally junction 1, ceased to exist and junction 9 (the first junction on the new extension) was and still is only a southbound exit onto the old A74 just south of Blackwood village, to serve the villages of Blackwood, Kirkmuirhill, Lesmahagow and Coalburn.
1990s extension to Scotland-England border (1992–1999) In 1987, the
government committed to upgrading the remaining A74 from junction 12 to the M6 to motorway standard. When the first section opened, as far south as Abington (junctions 12-J13) in 1991 it was numbered M74. Following this, the government announced that the route would be completed as the M6, as the two motorways would meet head on at Carlisle. The Scottish section of the A74 was then upgraded in sections, not all contiguous, as the A74(M), a temporary number until all the sections were complete, and the English section had been constructed and connected to the M6. They were constructed with dual three-lane carriageways. In 1995, the first northern extension was opened to Fullerton Road in Glasgow, as M74. The A74 upgrades were complete by 1999.
M6 Carlisle – Guards Mill (2004–2008) Plans to upgrade the English section of A74 (Cumberland Gap) from the Scottish border at Gretna to Carlisle were announced in 2004. Costing £174million, this was constructed as M6 as originally planned in the 1990s, and was opened on 5 December 2008. The project also included the construction of a new bridge crossing the
River Esk. This means that there is now a continuous motorway from London to Glasgow, with four numbers (M1, M6, A74(M) and M74).
M74 northern extension to M8 (2008–2011) Construction on the six-lane M74 Northern Extension or M74 Completion Scheme northwards by through the south-eastern part of Glasgow to meet the
M8 started in 2008, with opening on 28 June 2011. The extension involved the demolition of the
Rosebery Park football ground. The city centre section is supposed to perform a similar role to the never-built southern flank of the
Glasgow Inner Ring Road planned in the 1960s, and first set out as a scheme in the
Bruce Report of the 1940s, but only half-completed. The scheme was opposed by JAM74, a coalition of various activist groups, led by
Friends of the Earth. They successfully called for a public inquiry, which took place during 2003 and 2004. Developers mobilised discourses of blight and inflated job claims (which had expanded from 2,900-4,000 in 1994 to 44,000 in 2001) to argue for approval. The enquiry concluded that the job forecasts were "not [shown] to be robust" and the extension would have "very serious undesirable results", including community severance and an adverse effect on the environment. First Minister Jack McConnell said the road would be authorised regardless of the inquiry's findings. The scheme was at the centre of a
road protest from local campaigners and
environmentalists; JAM74 launched an appeal against the original decision to ignore the inquiry's advice, however the case against the road orders collapsed on the first day of the hearing in June 2006, the net effect being a further three years delay to the start of construction, adding an estimated £20m to the construction cost. Scottish First Minister
Alex Salmond officially launched construction on 28 May 2008. Construction was carried out by Interlink M74, a joint venture of
Balfour Beatty,
Morgan Est,
Morrison Construction and
Sir Robert McAlpine. during this time eight large former industrial sites were investigated involving more than a hundred archaeologists. Discoveries included the Govan Iron Works and associated workers' housing, the Caledonian Pottery, a block of 19th century tenements, a biscuit factory, urban limeworks and more. Many of the structures were in use into the 20th century. The excavation of both manufacturing and domestic sites provided a unique insight into both how objects were made and how they were used. Finds included stamped bricks from three local manufacturers, bottle and window glass fragments, and pottery stamps or transfer prints with different customer names on them. The project's cost far exceeded original projections. In 1999, it was expected to cost £177million. By the time the contract was awarded, it was projected at £445million. It ran under-budget at £437million. The project total is estimated to be £692million once the cost of purchasing land is included. The road was labelled "Britain's most expensive road" by the
Glasgow Evening Times and Green MSP
Patrick Harvie said the money should instead have been used to fund active and public transport improvements.
East End Regeneration Route Construction of the
East End Regeneration Route (designated as the A728) made use of existing stretches of road and filler sections on previously derelict land and has the ultimate intention to connect the M74 Northern Extensions with the M8 motorway at the
Provan Gas Works interchange with the
M80 motorway. Phase 1 and Phase 2 from the M74 junction 1A (
Polmadie) to the
A89 west of
Parkhead began in 2008 and was completed in 2012, but Phase 3 from Parkhead to the M80 did not follow as planned. ==Naming confusion==