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M1 motorway (Hungary), a road connecting Budapest and Győr and Hegyeshalom, border to Austria; M1 motorway (Northern Ireland), a road connecting Belfast and Dungannon; M1 motorway (Republic of Ireland), a road connecting Dublin to the border with Northern Ireland; M1 highway (Russia), a road connecting Moscow and the border with Belarus
The M1 motorway connects London to Leeds, where it joins the A1(M) near Aberford, to connect to Newcastle. It was the first inter-urban motorway to be completed in the UK; [2] the first motorway in the country was the Preston Bypass, which later became part of the M6. [3] The motorway is 193 miles (311 km) long and was constructed in four ...
The M1 motorway (Irish: Mótarbhealach M1) is a motorway in Ireland. It forms the large majority of the N1 national primary road connecting Dublin towards Belfast along the east of the island of Ireland .
The M1 is straight and flat on the 6-mile (9.7 km) stretch between Junctions 9 and 10 and on the 4-mile (6.4 km) stretch between Junctions 12 and 13, and an urban myth exists claiming that these were to be used as supplementary runways by the United States Air Force in the event of a major conflict with the Soviet Union.
The M1 motorway (Hungarian: M1-es autópálya) is a toll motorway in northwestern Hungary, connecting Budapest to Győr and Vienna. The first section of the motorway opened in the 1970s, reaching the Austrian border at Hegyeshalom in 1996. It follows the route of the old Route 1 one-lane highway.
A detailed map is available, [11] showing toll roads in red and toll-exempt sections of the motorway network. Since the beginning of 2008, the purchase of a motorway sticker is handled electronically (known as an "e-sticker" or e-matrica ), [ 12 ] thus cannot be put physically on the windshield anymore, it is only registered in a computer ...
List includes metropolitan areas according only to the studies of ESPON, Eurostat, and OECD.For this reason some metropolitan areas, like the Italian Genoa Metropolitan Area (with a population of 1,510,781 as of 2010 [1]) or the Ukrainian Kryvyi Rih metropolitan area (with a population of 1,170,953 as of 2019 [2]), are not included in this list, with data by other statistic survey institutes.
1940s map showing alignment of A427 overlaid with current roads. Although references to the Catthorpe Interchange started to appear from the mid-1970s, [7] the interchange was only formally created in 1994 to join the newly established A14 trunk road with the existing M1 and M6 motorways.