notes.husk.org. scribblings by Paul Mison.

2012-04-12

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photo 20:07:10
Motorway interchange near the Yokohama port, Honshu, Japan (35°27’ N, 139°41’ E), by Yann Arthus-Betrand.

Motorway interchange near the Yokohama port, Honshu, Japan (35°27’ N, 139°41’ E), by Yann Arthus-Betrand.

2012-03-29

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photos 18:51:05

Motorway junction posters by Melissa Price, at Print Process.

I could have sworn I posted these already, but I can’t find any sign that I did. I was reminded of them by fact that the V&A is selling the A2 versions in their shop, to tie in with the British Design exhibition (which runs until 12 August 2012).

They also remind me of my previous post about the motorway strip maps in 1980s AA handbooks. So clean, so minimal, so nice.

2012-03-19

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quote 21:08:05
“ Working as a gas engineer in south London, Smith knew a thing or two about traffic jams and was fascinated by roads. “It’s a random thing, it’s abstract, it’s eccentric. People have different interests. How do you quantify normality? ”

2012-03-15

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quote 00:26:05
“ The M25 was opened by Margaret Thatcher in 1986 and will endure as a monument to her era far longer than wars or broken unions. A visible symbol of individualism and the triumph of the car, the motorway was widened by the Blair government, building on the Iron Lady’s legacy in every way. ”

2011-05-06

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photo 05:57:00
Fortune Magazine cover, June 1938, as seen in the NYC Transit Museum. Illustration by Hans J. Barchel. Lovely. (via Past Present)

Fortune Magazine cover, June 1938, as seen in the NYC Transit Museum. Illustration by Hans J. Barchel. Lovely. (via Past Present)

2011-01-02

2010-12-04

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quote 20:16:14
“ I was fascinated by the schematic diagrams showing the layout of road junctions on each of the motorways. The motorways were represented on the diagrams themselves by dead straight lines – with one exception: the M25. This motorway was shown as a square, apparently enclosing all of London. ”

Oliver O’Brien in Where is London? on Suprageography, as quoted (more or less) by Martin Deutsch.

This is part of the post I was responding to with Concentric Londons, but Martin’s post reminded me that I should also have a little Proustian fugue on the subject of AA handbooks. As Oliver writes, they contained strip maps of the UK’s motorways, with the details cut back to just the intersections. Each had a carefully designed diagram, so the different designs of the four-level stack at the M25/M4 interchange was clearly different from the whirlpool of the nearby M25/M3 junction.

As with the London Underground diagram, which made the complexity of the city above irrelevant to me as a child visiting the Natural History Museum, the AA diagrams made the long stretches of road between Suffolk and Scotland easy to understand and handle.

I don’t imagine my parents kept the handbooks (certainly I can’t remember seeing one for ages), and there’s barely any record of them online. If you want an idea of what they looked like, though, you could do worse than visit the exit list pages (for example, for the London-Swansea M4) on the wonderful CBRD. If anyone does ever come across a mid-1980s AA Member’s Handbook, though, I’d love to see scans of the originals.

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