Kingsway is a dual carriageway in Greater Manchester, England, which runs from Levenshulme to Cheadle. It is approximately 7.3 mi (11.7 km) long and is a link road between the city centre and the southern suburbs of Greater Manchester, forming part of the A34. Kingsway was built in the late 1920s between Levenshulme and Parrs Wood, and was originally designed as a combined road and tram route. The tram tracks were eventually removed and the road was later extended to bypass Cheadle and join onto the M60 motorway.[1]
History
Kingsway past & present
A 1930s photograph of Kingsway in Burnage with a Corporation Tram travelling on the central reservation
Kingsway as it appears today, with a grassed central reservation
Kingsway was constructed in stages from the mid-1920s and completed in 1930.[2] It was named after King George V and was originally numbered A5079.[citation needed]
On either side of the new road, the Manchester Corporation bought up 1,165 acres (4.71 km2) of land to build the Kingsway Housing Scheme, a large council housing scheme to tackle the acute housing shortage in the city. Around 1,200 houses were built, along with amenities including new schools, quickly turning a rural area into a sizeable suburban council estate.[4]
Kingsway runs in a south-westerly direction until the junction with the M60 motorway, when it curves around to run south-east. It begins in Levenshulme continuing from Slade Lane, and heads south-west through Fallowfield, Ladybarn, Burnage, and Parrs Wood where it originally ended. It continues south-west through East Didsbury, until it reaches the motorway, and then heads south-east through Gatley and Cheadle, before it joins to the Handforth bypass at Cheadle Royal which was opened in 1995.[1] The junction with the A560 road in Gatley is one of the busiest in Greater Manchester with over 7,000 vehicles passing through during the rush hour.[citation needed]
Places of interest
Parrs Wood Entertainment Centre in East Didsbury is on Kingsway.
"St Nicholas' Church- Scaffolding to East End and Kingsway". Burnage Memory Bank. 1932. Retrieved 8 June 2017.[dead link] - Photograph looking north along Kingsway from junction with Poplar Road, showing scaffolding on St Nicholas' Church, Kingsway Garage and tram tracks in the central reservation
"Kingsway, Manchester, 1949". Flickr. Museum of Transport Greater Manchester archive. 1949. Retrieved 10 June 2017. Photo of Kingsway tram tracks being dug up after the closure of the tram network in 1949.