Muscat Daily

INTERESTIN­G FACTS ABOUT

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Driving along the M62 motorway, on the border between Lancashire and Yorkshire between junctions 22 and 23, motorists are greeted with an unusual sight - a farm situated smack dab in the middle of the motorway.

The two incoming carriagewa­ys of the high-speed motorway connecting the cities of Liverpool and Hull separates at this point to make room for the Stott Hall Farm. For the past half a century, the farm has become one of the best-known sights, seen by a hundred thousand people everyday as they pass by at 70 miles per hour.

The Stott Hall Farm has stood on this very spot for the past 300 years, and for two centuries, there was nothing else there but the birds and the sheep.

Then, the M62 arrived, right to the farm’s doorstep. In its wake was hundreds of bulldozed homes and displaced families. But miraculous­ly, the Stott Hall Farm survived.

For decades, passing mo- torists assumed the owners were too stubborn to sell their property and so the motorway was built around the farm. In reality, the farm was saved by the geology of the land beneath the 15 acre farm.

“They couldn't build the eastbound carriagewa­y as high as the westbound carriagewa­y,” explains sheep farmer Paul Thorp, who bought the property from Ken and Beth Wild.

“They just kept getting landslips and one thing and another. So, they decided to part the motorway and managed to save the building. That's the only reason it's still here.”

Engineers had to build underpasse­s under each carriagewa­y so that farm owners could easily access other parts of his land without crossing the motorway.

The farm is separated from the motorway by crash barriers and a fence to keep livestock in and prevent out-of-control vehicles crashing onto the property.

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