(London Road) looking northwards towards Gallowgate (with the
Provan Gas Works beyond)
Inner Ring Road plans The history of the route goes back to the
Glasgow Inner Ring Road (IRR) project of the 1960s. Owing largely to public opposition, only the northern and western flanks of this were ever built (this is now the central section of the
M8). With the resultant chronic traffic congestion on the M8, only in 2011 was the southern flank, the
M74 Completion, finally opened after much local opposition. The construction of the EERR link is intended to provide an 'inner circle' connecting the new section of M74 at
Polmadie Road with the M8 at
Provan. at
Rutherglen Bridge (top left), running through
Dalmarnock, passing
Celtic Park and terminating north of
Parkhead at
Duke Street (bottom right) The route of the EERR was planned as early as 1965 by the then
Glasgow Corporation after the Glasgow Inner Ring Road proposals originating from the
Bruce Report, and was originally a continuation of the
Stirling Motorway (which would be realised as the
M80) which would have run directly south beyond the interchange with the
Monkland Motorway (the present-day
M8) at
Provan Gas Works. This road would have driven south towards the extended
South Link Motorway (now the
M74) and would have served as an "outer ring" for the city. As the appetite for further inner urban motorway developments waned in the 1970s following the backlash when the city centre section of the IRR was built in the late 1960s, the route evolved into an urban thoroughfare instead.
1990s - 2012: Parkhead Bypass and Clyde Gateway Phase 1 & 2 The M80, when eventually built in the early 1990s, now terminated at the Provan Gas Works interchange, whilst the
Parkhead bypass, constructed in 1988 as part of the
Parkhead Forge shopping development, was effectively the first section of the EERR. From Parkhead, the road would cut northward, through Hogarth Park, a former railway embankment now used as public open space. The new road would run between
Haghill and
Carntyne, under Edinburgh Road and Cumbernauld Road continuing along the old
Caledonian Railway "Switchback" line to the M8/M80 junction at Provan. A planning application was submitted for the southern section of the EERR, named the
Clyde Gateway, in October 2005, but the winning of Host City for the
2014 Commonwealth Games provided the necessary impetus. Phase 1, from junction 1A of the now-completed M74 extension
Polmadie Road to
Shawfield opened in April 2007 as part of the
Oatlands development. Phase 2 was completed in April 2012 and designated as the A728. It passes
Shawfield Stadium, over the River Clyde at
Rutherglen Bridge and past
Dalmarnock railway station (where it meets the
A749), before linking up with the
Parkhead bypass (
A74) and the new stadia district (
Celtic Park and the
Sir Chris Hoy Velodrome), joining the existing road network at the
Forge Retail Park. and to be complete in 2021, at an estimated cost of £60 million. As of 2020, the plan was reported to have been quietly forgotten in 2019 as funding was unlikely to be made available. It was confirmed subsequently that the project was still under consideration, with a motion to cancel it officially on environmental grounds being rejected by the council in June 2021. In October 2021, the route was formally cancelled. ==Western branch==