A1 motorway (Serbia)

Autoput A 1
Аутопут А1
Route information
Part of
Length: 539 km (335 mi)
588 km (365 mi) planned
Major junctions
From: Hungarian M5 at Horgoš border crossing
 

Belgrade bypass near Batajnica
Serbian motorway A3 shield at Dobanovci interchange
Road 13, SuboticaKikinda at Subotica
Road 12, Novi SadZrenjanin at Novi Sad
Expressway 24 (Serbia) Expressway 24, Kragujevac-Batočina at Batočina
Road 14, SmederevoPožarevacNegotin at Smederevo
E761, KruševacParaćinZaječar at Paraćin (future Serbian motorway A5 shield)
Niš-Pirot-Sofia at A1/A4 junction near Niš

Road 39, LeskovacPirot at Leskovac
To: M1 at Preševo border crossing
Location
Regions: North Banat, North Bačka, South Bačka, Srem, Belgrade, Podunavlje, Šumadija, Pomoravlje, Rasina, Nišava, Jablanica, Pčinja
Major cities: Subotica, Novi Sad, Belgrade, Smederevo, Jagodina, Kruševac, Niš, Leskovac, Vranje
Highway system
Motorways in Serbia

Motorway A1 (Serbian: Аутопут А1 / Autoput A1) spans approximately 590 kilometers (370 mi) and is the longest motorway in the Serbia. It crosses the country from north to south, starting at Horgoš border crossing with Hungary and ending with Preševo border crossing with Republic of Macedonia. As a part of the Pan-European corridor X, connecting many larger Serbian cities and part of capital's bypass, it is one of the most vital highways of Serbian road infrastructure. Significant works are undergoing for its reconstruction and enhancement.[1]

Sections

The highway consists of three major sections: HorgošSuboticaNovi SadBelgrade (178 km), BelgradeNiš (237 km) and NišLeskovacPreševoMacedonian border (152 km). After enhancement works, mostly completed in 2011, the whole Horgoš–Grdelica and Vladičin Han-state boundary route is a complete dual carriageway. Enhancement of southern part, financed by Serbian Government and Hellenic Plan is still in progress. Northern and central section are linked through the heart of the city of Belgrade, but completion of the Belgrade bypass will provide a separate transit route.[2]

References

Gallery


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, February 11, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.