Motorway Services Online

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Monktonhall services

Monktonhall
(former)
Road:A1 at the Musselburgh/City Bypass exit
A720 at the A1 roundabout
(also accessible to traffic on the B6415)

(open map)
Address:Service Area

Old Craighall
Musselburgh
East Lothain

EH21 8RE
EH21 8RE
Signposted from the road?Yes
Previous names:Monktonhall
Services type:Single site located at a junction

The only official service area on the Scottish side of the A1, though large parts of Musselburgh were recently demolished.

Work on demolishing the remaining facilities began in June 2023, replacing it with a much smaller facility.

Facilities

Forecourt: BP, Hursts, Costa Express, Rollover

Trivia and History

Musselburgh car park 1991.jpg
The entrance to the car park in 1991.

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Opened by Granada 1989
Granada branding removed 2001
Main building closed 2010
Moto involvement officially ends 2013
Main building demolished 2021

The service area was opened as Edinburgh services, a name which still persists on some maps. Meanwhile the current operator, MFG, tend to call it Monktonhall services.

It was built by Granada in 1989 to coincide with the completion of the Edinburgh City Bypass and the A1 Musselburgh Bypass. It had a Granada Shop, and Country Kitchen Restaurant, as well as a Granada Lodge.

The restaurant became Scotland's only AJ's in 1992. The shop became a Burger King, and then the AJ's changed to a Little Chef by Granada in 1996. Little Chef generally called it Musselburgh, as did Moto.

In 2001 there were plans for the Burger King to gain a drive thru, but these were dropped. There were also plans for an extension to the Travelodge building utilising some of what was the HGV parking area. This plan was accepted in 2005 but was never built.

Like Colsterworth services, most of Musselburgh was sold off by Moto in 2002 along with the Little Chef brand, although for a while they operated the restaurant remotely by franchise arrangement.

The Little Chef here closed in 2010, leaving the main amenity building completely devoid of any facilities.

The Travelodge was previously also operated by Moto, but Travelodge themselves would eventually take it over. In October 2013, MRH took over operation of the filling station and the brand changed from Esso to BP. It is now operated by MFG following the merger of the two companies, and is now the only signposted service area with a Hursts store.

The service area is still signed from the A1 and A720, but the symbols advertise just a hotel and petrol station. Travelodge then closed their hotel in early 2021, leaving just a filling station and a large, derelict area.

New Services

Work started to demolish the abandoned buildings in September 2021. There will be a new Starbucks Drive Thru, positioned on the current car park with the current car park entrance being blocked off and a new car park positioned on the site of the former amenity building. Four electric vehicle charging bays will also be positioned in the Starbucks car park.

The plans were drawn up before the hotel closed, and a new hotel entrance was due to be constructed. The hotel was instead demolished with the rest of the buildings. Under a separate ongoing planning proposal, the former service area building will now be turned into a secured HGV parking area, with the former tourist information building becoming a shower block.

Meanwhile, MFG are redeveloping their forecourt. Work began in June 2023, with the new facility planned to have six pumps and eight electric vehicle charging bays, a new sales building containing a Londis and Greggs, and a larger circulation area.

Alternatives

Previous:Next:
Lindisfarne (60 miles)Services on the A1none
Dreghorn (7 miles)Services on the A720end of road

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