Churchill away

Published on 18 September 2020

Liverpool's Churchill Way flyovers would have been 50 this year, but they were demolished at the end of 2019. While they stood they dominated the city centre landscape around Liverpool's central library, station and museum. Bryn Buck took a trip to Merseyside to see what's left now the bridges are gone.

Except it never really worked out like that. The Queensway Tunnel was relieved by the newer Kingsway Tunnel just a few years later, massively reducing its traffic problems. The Liverpool Inner Motorway and the huge associated changes to the street network never came to pass. And as the streets of Liverpool were updated in the absence of those plans, the flyovers never found their place. Look at a street plan of Liverpool and you can immediately see that they never really led to anything at the eastern end, and indeed running parallel to them is a much bigger and busier dual carriageway at surface level whose traffic could never make use of them.

In late 2018 a structural survey found that they had been built with substandard materials and were seriously unsafe, and faced with a £60m repair bill, Liverpool City Council decided to bring in the demolition crews, at a still-eyewatering cost of £5.7m. Between September and December 2019 they were taken down.

Now that Churchill Way has gone away, what's this unloved patch of central Liverpool like? Bryn Buck, author of the Show Me A Sign blog, has been to take a look.

A reminder of the past

From Bryn's tour of the mouth of the Queensway Tunnel from 2005, here's a quick look at what was there when the flyovers still stood.

From west to east

Fast forward to 2020, then, and the flyovers are gone. This first part of the tour follows the line of the northern flyover, from Great Crosshall Street to Lime Street.

From east to west

The second part of the tour traces the line of the curved southern flyover, which used to carry traffic towards the city centre.

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Comments

Neil Fitzgerald 2 October 2020

Thanks for this blog. A very interesting read indeed. Thank you for the time you've taken to snapshot history here.

Nick Jenkins 4 October 2020

Although, as you correctly say, these flyovers were by the Queensway Tunnel, the 1/2500 OS plan base on which the proposals are drawn clearly calls it the Kingsway Entrance. I went over there (from Ellesmere Port) in November when they were still clearing the rubble away and took a few photographs which I could send on to you if you wish.

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