National Primary Route 6

Could open : 2020-2025

Status : Uncommitted

M6 Motorway Logo

 



Motorway : 7.2 km

In 1991, Athlone was bypassed to the north with a grade-separated dual carriageway. Control of access was high, with no frontage breaks, although cyclists and pedestrians were permitted due to the lack of motorway regulations. Unfortunately, tight bends at either end meant that safety and speed limits weren't as high as they could be, and in the motorway redesignation rounds of 2008 and 2009, Athlone was shortlisted but missed out. It was clear that it just wasn't up to scratch. Nonetheless, motorways were connected to either end from 2007 to 2010, creating a long distance Dublin-Galway route of which the Athlone Bypass was the central stopover. The bypass's speed limit remained at 100 km/h, reflecting its lower standard than adjacent segments.

The route's double function as town distributor and long distance expressway mean that a major rebuild would be needed to adequately separate them, and this would in any case still leave the tight bends. The only truly ideal answer is to build a second bypass to the south of the town that leaves the current one for local traffic movements only. Since this would cut the corner, it would in fact shorten the through-distance somewhat, from 9.4 to 7.2 kilometres. With no intermediate junctions, it would also be faster and safer. The time saving is small (2 mins*), but the safety improvement could be significant.

* 9.4 km at 100 km/h takes 5'38
  7.2 km at 120 km/h takes 3'36

Wikipedia page on this road

ESSENTIAL INFO :

Origin M6, east of Athlone
Terminates M6, west of Athlone
Places Served -
Routes Spawned -
Intersects -


SURVEY :


Please take a minute to answer a very short survey on your opinion of this road proposal.


Anonymous from UK rates this scheme 4/10 and its alignment 6/10; and reckons the standard is about right.

JupiterKid from Ireland rates this scheme 5/10 and its alignment 8/10; and reckons the standard is about right. He has the following comments to make:
"This would be a useful scheme, but realistically is a long way off, if it's ever built. The main problems as I see them are twofold - the ground over which the scheme traverses is very low lying and forms part of the Shannon callows. There would be some pretty big engineering challenges building this road over flood-prone and boggy ground. Also, the road, because it would cross the Shannon callows, would come under heightened environmental scrutiny.

The second problem with the road is that it would not serve any readily developable land adjacent to Athlone town in terms of access and whilst this would actually be good for long distance traffic, it would be opposed by local politicans keen to play the land rezoning game."

Anonymous from Ireland loves the scheme and rates it 10/10 and its alignment 10/10; and reckons the standard is about right.


MAP OF M6 :