Generated by GPT-5-mini| A5058 | |
|---|---|
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| Country | ENG |
| Route | 5058 |
| Direction a | West |
| Direction b | East |
A5058
The A5058 is a numbered road in England forming part of the urban radial network around Liverpool and connecting suburbs such as Aigburth, Anfield, Kirkdale, Bootle, and Croxteth. It interfaces with major routes including the A59, A56, A5036, and provides access to transport hubs like Liverpool Lime Street railway station, Liverpool John Lennon Airport, and the Port of Liverpool. The road passes near landmarks such as Goodison Park, Anfield Stadium, Sefton Park, and industrial sites around Stanley Dock.
The A5058 runs through neighborhoods and civic districts including Everton, Vauxhall and Wavertree, intersecting with arterial roads that lead toward Manchester, Preston, and the Wirral Peninsula via the Mersey Tunnel. It skirts green spaces such as Sefton Park and waterways including the River Mersey and the Leeds and Liverpool Canal, while providing access to cultural institutions like the Walker Art Gallery and Museum of Liverpool. The alignment crosses railway corridors used by Northern Trains and Merseyrail services and is proximate to orbital routes linking to the M62 motorway and the A580 East Lancashire Road.
The A5058 developed from 19th- and 20th-century turnpike and municipal schemes tied to expansion around Liverpool Cathedral, St George's Hall (Liverpool), and dockside growth at Albert Dock. During the interwar period it was upgraded in phases influenced by traffic demands from the Liverpool Overhead Railway era and wartime logistics tied to the Atlantic convoys and Battle of the Atlantic. Postwar reconstruction associated with the Liverpool Blitz and later redevelopment projects such as the Liverpool ONE regeneration prompted resurfacing, junction reconfiguration, and link upgrades in the 1960s–1990s.
Key junctions lie near civic and transport nodes: connections with the A59 and A56 provide radial access toward Ormskirk and St Helens respectively; links to the A5036 and A565 support freight movement to the Port of Liverpool and ferry services at Mersey Ferry terminals. Notable adjacent locations include sporting venues Anfield Stadium and Goodison Park, educational institutions like University of Liverpool and Liverpool John Moores University, healthcare sites such as Royal Liverpool University Hospital, and heritage assets including Pier Head and Birkenhead Priory across the estuary.
Traffic volumes on the A5058 reflect commuter flows to employment centres like Liverpool City Centre, intermodal freight to the Port of Liverpool and leisure travel toward Sefton Park and waterfront attractions. Collision studies undertaken by Merseyside Police and transport planners at Merseyside Transport Partnership have targeted high-risk junctions near Everton Road and stretches with pedestrian exposure by Royal Hospital access. Measures including signal optimisation, pedestrian crossings near Liverpool Lime Street railway station and enforcement campaigns with Highways England have been implemented to reduce casualty rates.
The corridor is served by bus operators such as Arriva North West, Stagecoach Merseyside, and local shuttle services linking to rail interchange points including Liverpool Central and James Street railway station. Proximity to Merseyrail stations supports modal interchange; cycling provision has been expanded with segregated lanes and Quietway-style routes connecting to Sustrans networks and cycle parking at hubs like Central Station. Park-and-ride and demand-responsive services coordinate with community transport providers and initiatives affiliated with Liverpool City Council.
Planned interventions promoted by regional bodies including Merseytravel and Liverpool City Council consider junction remodelling, bus priority corridors, and cycling network completion to align with climate targets in the UK Climate Change Act 2008 and local strategies such as the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority transport plan. Proposals linked to dockland regeneration at Stanley Dock and workforce access to Liverpool Waters envisage capacity upgrades, improved pedestrianisation near cultural quarters like Albert Dock, and freight routing adjustments to support operations at the Ellesmere Port corridor.
Category:Roads in Liverpool