A70 road

Road in Scotland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The A70 road is a major road in Scotland, United Kingdom. It runs a total of 74.3 miles (119.6 km) from Edinburgh to Ayr. It begins as Dalry Road at the Haymarket, Edinburgh junction with the A8, passing near but not through Lanark and ending as Miller Road in Ayr. Between Edinburgh city centre and Lanark it passes through the Edinburgh suburbs of Slateford, Juniper Green, Currie and Balerno; then Carnwath (where the A70 joins the A721 for three miles), Carstairs (where the two roads separate again),[2] and Ravenstruther, while between Lanark and Ayr it passes through Hyndford Bridge, Rigside, Douglas, Muirkirk, Smallburn, Cumnock, Ochiltree, and Coylton.

Length75.5 mi[1] (121.5 km)
Eastend A8 in Edinburgh
55.9391°N 3.2263°W / 55.9391; -3.2263 (A70 road (eastern end))
Major intersections
Quick facts Route information, Length ...
A70 shield
A70
Route information
Length75.5 mi[1] (121.5 km)
Major junctions
East end A8 in Edinburgh
55.9391°N 3.2263°W / 55.9391; -3.2263 (A70 road (eastern end))
Major intersections
West end A719 in Ayr
55.4582°N 4.6352°W / 55.4582; -4.6352 (A70 road (western end))
Location
CountryUnited Kingdom
Constituent countryScotland
Council areas
Primary
destinations
Ayr, Cumnock, Lanark, Edinburgh
Road network
A69 A71
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The Scots name of the road is the "Lang Whang",[3] a whang in the Scots tongue being a narrow strip of leather, usually a long leather bootlace.[4] Much of the road is over elevated, desolate moorland; it ascends several times on its course to heights over 1000 feet above sea level. Because the wind enjoys an easy and uninterrupted passage over its length, in winter the road is frequently closed by snow, even by modest snowfalls. The road passes elevated farmland and grouse moor and presents extensive views over central Scotland to the north.

According to tradition, Robert Burns stopped at the formerly thatched Wee Bush Inn in Carnwath on his way to Edinburgh: quite a likely event since the road is the most direct link between the Scottish capital and Burn's native Ayrshire. As the story has it, all Burns could think of to engrave on the inn window (a habit for which he had a reputation) was, "Lang Whang, Lang Whang, Lang bloody Whang", which neatly sums up the prospect for anybody facing the walk, ride or cycle along it, especially in winter. It was one of the roads along which the murderers Burke and Hare brought the cadavers of their victims for the Edinburgh Medical College to dissect.[5]

The Collins 2012 Big Road Atlas shows the A70 as one of the five most dangerous roads in Scotland, based on the number of serious and fatal accidents between 2007 and 2009 in proportion to traffic.[6] There are many extremely dangerous sections: particular blackspots are the crown of Auchinoon Brae on the approach to Harperigg Reservoir and the right angled bends at the east end of the reservoir. Any of the undulating and winding terrain between Balerno and Carnwath where oncoming cars can be concealed by dips in the road can be considered dangerous and there is barely a half-mile stretch of the Lang Whang between Balerno and Carnwath which has not witnessed a fatal accident over the past twenty years.

A70 near Crosswood Hill Farm

The A70 is purportedly the scene of one of Scotland's best-known UFO incidents, now known as 'the A70 incident'. Two men, Garry Wood and Colin Wright, were travelling one evening in 1992 from the outskirts of Edinburgh to the village of Tarbrax. Something evidently caused them to be delayed, for they arrived at their destination much later than expected. Several months later the pair underwent hypnotic regression and claimed to recall that they had been abducted, examined and communicated with by alien creatures.[7][8]

From Little Vantage on the A70 near Harperrig Reservoir, a footpath (called Thieves Road) heads south across the upper reaches of the Water of Leith and continues across moorland to a pass over the Pentland Hills called Cauldstane Slap and on to West Linton. This was part of a much longer drove road used in past centuries for transporting cattle south from the central belt and northern Scotland to Peebles and ultimately to the English markets, and for moving sheep north from West Linton market.[9]

Junction list

More information County, Location ...
CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
EdinburghEdinburgh0.00.0West Maitland Street / Haymarket Terrace (A8)Eastern terminus
0.60.97Gorgie Road (A71 west) / Murieston Road / Henderson TerraceNo access from A70 east to A71 or from A71 to A70 west; eastern terminus of A71
South LanarkshireCarnwath24.539.4 A721 southeast (Caldwell Terrace) PeeblesEastern terminus of A721 concurrency
Carstairs27.343.9 A721 northwest to A73 Carluke, GlasgowWestern terminus of A721 concurrency
28.746.2 A743 west LanarkInformation signed eastbound only; eastern terminus of A743
Lanark30.849.6 A73 north (Hynford Road) to A8 Lanark, GlasgowEastern terminus of A73 concurrency
Carmichael31.250.2 A73 south to M74 / A702 CarlisleTo M74 signed westbound only, To A702 eastbound only; western terminus of A73 concurrency
Douglas38.0–
38.3
61.2–
61.6
M74 southeast Carlisle, Abington
B7078 to M74 northwest Glasgow, Coalburn
M74 junction 11
East AyrshireCumnock60.897.8 A76 Dumfries, Kilmarnock, New Cumnock, Mauchline, AuchinleckNew Cumnock signed westbound only, Mauchline and Auchinleck eastbound only
South AyrshireAyr73.8118.8 A77 to A78 / A79 Stranraer, Girvan, Glasgow, Kilmarnock, Greenock, Prestwick Airport
75.0120.7Station Road (A79 north / Ring Road north) Town centre (N & S)Ring Road signed westbound only, Town centre signed eastbound only; eastern terminus of A79 concurrency
75.1120.9 A713 southeast (Castle Hill Road) Castle DouglasHospital signed eastbound only; Northwestern terminus of A713
75.2121.0 Beresford Place (A79 south) to A77 / B7024 Alloway, StranraerWestern terminus of A79 concurrency
75.5121.5 A719 (Ring Road south / Racecourse Road / Alloway Place) MaidensWestern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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References

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