"Michael Bell" wrote in message
...
In article ,
Martin Underwood wrote:
"Niklas Karlsson" wrote in message
...
Mark Brader wrote on Sun, 09 Jan 2005 04:44:21 -0000:
John Rowland:
Nearly all London squares have a clockwise one-way system, even
though
when
all of the roads in and out of the square are one-way, an
anti-clockwise
one-way system is superior (because drivers have better visibility
when
curving to the left). ...
Perhaps this was done in preparation for a changeover to driving on
the
right. After all, now that Britain is part of the EU...
Sweden had left-hand driving until September 3, 1967.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dagen_H
The costs of doing this in the UK today would be prohibitive, both to
highway departments and to private individuals: every road junction would
need to have its white lines repainted on the other side; motorway
junctions and roundabouts would need their entry and exit roads
re-aligning (assuming that entry and exit roads are curved differently -
maybe this isn't the case); every car would need to scrapped and
replaced
with an LHD car.
I remember calculating at the time that the Swedish change-over cost 2
week's
GNP. That's an awful lot of money. And for what? Junction 8 on the M1 was
designed "wrong way round" in Mrs Castle's time to test the idea of
designing
junctions so that they could be changed over to right-hand drive, but the
experiment was never repeated.
Michael Bell
Junction 8 Nahh, The guys in the drawing office got it on the photocopier
the wrong away around,
and that's the story they put about, to cover up the stuff up :-)
peter