Our Patch August 2014 | Page 16

Our Patch AUGUST 2014 Our Patch AUGUST 2014 looking back THE FLYOVER H A M M ERS M IT H I Hammersmith Flyover under construction by St Paul’s Church in 1961 16 / 17 t is more than 50 years since the Hammersmith Flyover was opened. The tape was cut on 16 November 1961 by Harold Shearman, chairman of the London County Council, accompanied by Ernest Marples, Minister of Transport, who commented that ‘it’s quite the nicest flyover that I have seen’. Local opinion was – and remains – mixed. The mayor, Cllr Edith Woods, thought that the flyover was ‘beautiful’ and that Hammersmith would become well known because of it. Residents of College Court Mansions expressed their dismay about the noise and vibrations of the continuous traffic which kept them awake at night. The Cromwell Road Extension scheme had been many years in the planning. In 1953, supporters cited the ‘three quarters of an hour of daily frustration for thousands of drivers as they crawl in vehicle queues through Hammersmith, Chiswick and Kensington, with their bewildering system of one-way streets’. Opponents, including Hammersmith resident and author A P Herbert, were vociferous in their condemnation of a road. The flyover was intended to provide the essential link for through traffic on the Great West and Cromwell Roads and