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The M4, originally the London-South Wales Motorway, is a motorway in the United Kingdom running from west London to southwest Wales.The English section to the Severn Bridge was constructed between 1961 and 1971; the Welsh element was largely complete by 1980, though a non-motorway section around Briton Ferry bridge remained until 1993.
Easter travel – live: Bank holiday chaos as drivers face 20-mile queues on M4 and M5 and delays at Dover. ... South Wales, and Devon and Cornwall. However, there may be short-notice changes and ...
Drivers on the M4 between Wales and England have been warned that roadworks on the Severn bridge will remain until the summer of 2025. ... the UK’s second longest bridge that links south Wales ...
The M4 corridor is an area in the United Kingdom adjacent to the M4 motorway, which runs from London to South Wales. [1] It is a major hi-tech hub. [2] [3] Important cities and towns linked by the M4 include (from east to west) London, Slough, Bracknell, Maidenhead, Reading, Newbury, Swindon, Bath, Bristol, Newport, Cardiff, Port Talbot and Swansea.
The M4 (London-South Wales Motorway) in this area was opened in December 1964, from junctions 4 to 5; this 3.9-mile section cost £3.2m, and was built by Cubitts and Green. The interchange, therefore, is junction 4b of the M4.
The M4 Motorway is a 55-kilometre (34 mi) [1] series of partially tolled dual carriageway motorways in Sydney designated as route M4. The M4 designation is part of the wider A4 and M4 route designation, the M4 runs parallel and/or below ground to Great Western Highway , Parramatta Road and City West Link , which are part of route A44.
Culverhouse Cross (Welsh: Croes Cwrlwys) is a district straddling the boundary between Cardiff and the Vale of Glamorgan, Wales, in the community of Wenvoe.. The district is centred on a major traffic roundabout that links West Cardiff to the M4 motorway and is home to a number of different retail outlets, and formerly ITV Wales's headquarters.
The M48 is a 13-mile-long (21 km) motorway in Great Britain, which crosses the Severn near Chepstow, Monmouthshire, linking England with Wales via the Severn Bridge.This road used to be the M4, and as a result is anomalously numbered: as it lies to the north of the M4 and to the west of the M5, it is in the Motorway Zone 5.