Limited-access road

Limited-access road
The Veterans Memorial Parkway in London, Ontario is a modern at-grade expressway

A limited-access road known by various terms worldwide, including limited-access highway, dual-carriageway and expressway, is a highway or arterial road for high-speed traffic which has many or most characteristics of a controlled-access highway (freeway or motorway), including limited or no access to adjacent property, some degree of separation of opposing traffic flow, use of grade separated interchanges to some extent, prohibition of some modes of transport such as bicycles or horses and very few or no intersecting cross-streets. The degree of isolation from local traffic allowed varies between countries and regions. The precise definition of these terms varies by jurisdiction.[1][2] In some jurisdictions, the term expressway is synonymous with freeway or motorway.

California State Route 1 is showing parallel service roads for local traffic in Aptos. Map source: OpenStreetMap

History

The first implementation of limited-access roadways in the United States was of the Bronx River Parkway in New York, in 1907.[3] The New York State Parkway System was constructed as a network of high speed roads in and around New York City.

The first limited access highway built is thought to be the privately built Long Island Motor Parkway in Long Island, New York.[4]

The concept evolved into uninterrupted arterial roads[citation needed] that are commonly known as expressways in some parts of the world[2] and by other names including motorway and autobahn in others.

Regional implementations

In the United States, the national Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) uses "full control of access" only for freeways. Expressways are defined as having "partial control of access" (or semi-controlled access), meaning that major roads typically use interchanges and commercial development is accessed via cross roads or frontage roads, while minor roads can cross at grade and farms can have direct access. This definition is also used by some states, some of which also restrict freeways only to motor vehicles capable of maintaining a certain speed.[2][5] Some other states[citation needed] use "controlled access" to mean a higher standard than "limited access", while others[6] reverse the two terms.

Australia and Oceania

Australia

While most of Australia's larger capital cities feature a motorway network, Canberra, Adelaide, Hobart and the regional centres of Newcastle, Geelong, Gold Coast, and Wollongong rely on limited-access roads for high-speed local traffic.

The Canberra urban area in Australian Capital Territory has two expressway style main roads: Tuggranong Parkway from the satellite town of Tuggranong to the Glenloch Interchange outside of Belconnen, and Parkes Way from the Glenloch Interchange to the Anzac Parade roundabout in Canberra City.

South Australia has several expressways; some are controlled-access highways and others are slightly lower-grade limited-access roads.

Outside these areas, upgrades to full dual carriageway of the heavy-use Sydney-Melbourne (A31/M31 Hume Highway/Freeway) and Sydney-Brisbane (M1 Pacific Highway) interstate routes, a total length of more than 2,000 km (1,200 mi), are underway.

The Dunedin Northern Motorway, a typical non-freeway-type motorway in New Zealand

New Zealand: Expressway, Motorway

Motorway begins nz.png
Expressway begins nz.png

The terms Motorway and Expressway in New Zealand both encompass multilane divided freeways as well as narrower 2-4-lane undivided expressways with varying degrees of grade separation; the difference being that in New Zealand a Motorway has certain additional legal traffic restrictions.[7]



Asia

Philippines

The Philippines has many numbers of expressways and highways particularly concentrated on the island of Luzon. The country for now has 6 completed and available expressways and 8 major highways including the Pan-Philippine Highway also known as Asian Highway Highway 26. SLEX (South Luzon Expressway) is currently the longest toll expressway in the country covering about 97 km, after it was connected to Metro Manila Skyway, an elevated highway within Metro Manila, and STAR Tollway in Batangas. SCTEX (Subic- Clark- Tarlac Expressway) is the second longest expressway in the Philippines, connecting economic zones of Luisita, Tarlac; Clarkfield, Pampanga and Subic Bay, Zambales, it is as of now the fastest way to get to Manila from Northern Luzon. Still, many expressways are constructed for more convenient and faster way to drive to and from the capital, Manila, including TPLEX or Tarlac-Pangasinan-La Union Expressway, North Luzon West Expressway, Tarlac-Nueva Ecija-Aurora Expressway, CALABARZON Loop, North Luzon East Expressway and Infanta- Cabanatuan Scenic Superhighway.

Taiwan

Expressways are now known as Taiwan highways. However, many people still refer to them as provincial highway (省道 sheng-dao).

The provincial highway level is lower than the national highway(Freeway) in Taiwan.

Provincial Highways No. 61~88 are usually known as Expressway (快速公路). There are several sections open for the traffic. Others are still under construction.

East-west expressways and the West-Coast Expressway, indicated by a number greater than 60, were planned to ease the congestion in the freeways.

Malaysia: Lebuhraya

The North-South Expressway (Lebuhraya Utara Selantan) covers the length of Peninsular Malaysia. It connects Woodlands in Singapore to the Thailand border. Another expressway called the Karak Highway links Kuala Lumpur to Jabor. It covers almost the width of Peninsular Malaysia. There are many rest areas along both expressways. Both expressways has a speed limit from 90 km/h to 110 km/h.

Singapore

Singaporean expressways are used to get to one urban place to another. The longest is the Pan Island Expressway, which covers the width of Singapore. It is 42 kilometres long. Since 2009, even more expressways are being constructed. One of the newest is the Kallang-Paya Lebar Expressway which is 2 kilometres on ground level and 10 kilometres underground. That makes it the longest tunnel expressway in Southeast Asia. On ground level or on flyovers and viaducts, speed limits is 70 km/h to 90 km/h but in tunnels, the speed limit is from 70 km/h or 80 km/h.

India

The Mumbai-Pune Expressway as seen from Khandala

Expressways in India make up more than 600 km (370 mi) of the Indian National Highway System[8] on which they are the highest class of road. The National Highways Development Project is underway to add an additional 18,637 km (11,580 mi) of expressways to the network by the year 2022.[9][10]

Iran

Expressway in Iran.png

Expressways in Iran are one class lower than freeways and are used in large urban areas such as Isfahan or Tehran and between other important cities (Usually two province capitals) in rural and desert areas. The speed limit in Urban areas is between 50 and 70 km/h and in rural and desert areas between 90 and 110 km/h.

Japan

Japanese Road sign (Vehicles Only).svg

The term Expressway as used in English in Japan refers to both freeway-style highways and narrower, more winding, often undivided Regional High-Standard Highways 地域高規格道路 (ちいきこうきかくどうろ?). Both types of expressways have a combined length of 8,730 km as of March 2005.[11]

Europe

Austria: Schnellstraße

Arlberg Schnellstrasse (S16) near Schnann, Austria
Hinweiszeichen 8c.svg

In Austria the speed limit on a Schnellstraße is 100 – 130 km/h. Schnellstraßen are very similar to Austrian Autobahnen (freeways/motorways); the chief difference is that they are more cheaply built with smaller curve radius, often undivided and have fewer bridges and tunnels.[12]

Croatia

Some expressways are tailored for local traffic, such as the D28 (Vrbovec Expressway), and some are built as bypasses or beltways, such as the D31 (East Velika Gorica Bypass).

Czech Republic: Rychlostní silnice

Rychlostni-komunikace.png

Expressways in the Czech Republic, Czech: Rychlostní silnice (abbrrviation: R), are defined as dual carriageways with smaller emergency lane. The speed limit is 130 km/h (80 mph). Expressway road signs are white on blue. There are 391.2 km of rychlostní silnice.

Finland: Moottoriliikennetie

Moottoriliikennetie 563.svg

In Finland, a Moottoriliikennetie (Finnish) or Motortrafikled (Swedish) (both mean "motor traffic road") has a speed limit of 80 – 100 km/h[citation needed].

Germany: Schnellstraße

The Babenhäuser Landstraße near Frankfurt, Germany, a section of Bundestraße 3.
Zeichen 331.svg

A Kraftfahrstrasse (German for "motor-power road") in Germany is a grade of highway below the standard of an Autobahn. These are also colloquially called Schnellstraße (literally "fast road"). The speed limits are at least 60 km/h and oversized vehicles are banned.[13]

Hungary: autóút

Ireland: HQDC

The 6 lane Naas Road, the final stretch of the M7 nearing Dublin.

A High-quality dual carriageway (HQDC) in Ireland is normally completed to a motorway standard, including no right-turns, but with no motorway restrictions. These are common on the final stretches of motorways nearing a major city, generally in order to enable use of bus stops and city bus services on the particular stretch of road.

There are not yet any specific signs for this type of road, but the National Roads Authority have hinted that they are looking at implementing the German-style Autostrasse sign in Ireland.

Speed limits are normally 100 km/h compared to 120 km/h on motorways

Italy: superstrada

Strada extraurbana principale
  • Type B highway (or strada extraurbana principale), commonly but unofficially known as superstrada, is a divided highway with at least two lanes for each direction, paved shoulder on the right, no cross-traffic and no at-grade intersections. Access restrictions on such highways are exactly the same of autostrade, as well as signage at the beginning and the end of the highway (with the only difference being the background color, blue instead of green). Speed limit on type-B road is 110 km/h.
  • Motorized vehicles only (this sign is not associated with any particular road type)
    Type C highway (or strada extraurbana secondaria). Most Italian roads outside of town and cities belongs to this category. According to Italian Highway Code definition, a type-C road is a single carriageway with at least one lane for each direction and shoulders. It may have at-grade intersections, at-level crossings with railways, roundabouts and traffic lights.
    Despite the definition made by the Highway Code, this category contains also dual carriageways (commonly but unofficially known as strada scorrimento veloce or seldom as superstrada) that can not be classified as type-B highways because of the lack of one or more required features.
    In absence of specific regulation signs, a type-C road is accessible by all vehicles and pedestrians, even if it has separate carriageways and no cross-traffic. In order to deny access to pedestrians, bicycles and other slow vehicles, the road owner must place a specific prohibition sign for each category of transport to be banned. However, there is a sign that allows access to the road only to motorized vehicles (without power restrictions unless specified). This sign is very similar to those used in most European countries to indicate the beginning of a limited-access road, but its meaning in Italy is quite different as it does not indicate whether the road is or isn't a limited-access road.
    Speed limit on type-C roads is 90 km/h.

Netherlands: Autoweg

Nederlands verkeersbord G3.svg

In Netherlands, Autowegen or expressways are rare in comparison to Autosnelwegen (motorways). The speed limit is 100 km/h.

Norway: Motortrafikkvei

E6 motortrafikkvei at Lillehammer, Norway
Norwegian-road-sign-503.0.svg

In Norway, a motortrafikkvei (Norwegian for "motor traffic road"), also called a motorvei klasse B ("class-B motorway") is a high-speed highway with a speed limit of 90 km/h[citation needed].

Poland: droga ekspresowa

Znak D7.svg
S1 Droga ekspresowa in Bielsko-Biała, Poland

Droga ekspresowa (plural: drogi ekspresowe) in Poland refers to a network of roads fulfilling the role of bringing traffic to the motorways, and serving major international and inter-regional purposes. All expressways start with the letter S, followed by a number. They can be dual or single carriageways. As of May 2004 the Polish government documents indicated that the country had plans of an expressway and motorway network totalling 7,200 km (4,470 mi) (including about 2,000 km (1,240 mi) of motorways).[14] The speed limit is 120 km/h (dual carriageway).

Russia

Russia has a large federal highway network that totals approximately 30,000 km (18,640 mi).[15] Federal highways in the country are classified into two categories: "motorways" (Russian: магистральная автомобильная дорога, автомагистраль, not the same as the English term motorway) and "other".

Spain: Autovía

Spain traffic signal s1a.svg
The A-5 autovía near Navalcarnero, Madrid

Unlike Spain's Autopistas, specifically reserved for vehicles able to sustain at least 60 km/h (37 mph), and usually tolled, Autovías are usually upgrades from older roads, and never toll roads. In general, slow vehicles like bicycles and agricultural machinery are allowed under certain restrictions.

Sweden

Autoweg S.svg
CH-Hinweissignal-Autostrasse.svg
A Swedish 2+1 lane "motortrafikled" constituting part of Riksväg (national road) 34

The Swedish road type motortrafikled is a road with limited access (all grade-separated, no slow traffic) and two or three lanes. According to the EU's multilingual term base, motortrafikled should be translated to expressway, rapid road or road with limited access. The same rules apply to a motortrafikled as to a motorway - it is basically a half motorway. The speed limit is usually 90 – 100 km/h. Many motortrafikleder are built as 2+1 roads, alternating two lanes in one direction and one in the other, with a narrow fence in between.

Switzerland

In Switzerland Autostrasse (German, "auto road") or Semi-autoroute (French, "semi-freeway") is a highway that allows high-speed traffic but is not the highest class road, the Autobahn or Autoroute. The speed limit on these roads in Switzerland is 100 km/h (63 mph). Some Autostrasse\semi-autoroutes have no central barrier separating the lanes in different directions.

The A8 Autostrasse in Switzerland. Notice the speed limit, which is repetitively indicated, and the lack of a central physical barrier

United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom, the second tier of high speed roads below Motorways are typically dual carriageways. Many roads such as the A1, the A14, the A19 and the A42 are built to a high quality, in many places they are only intersected by grade-separated junctions, have full barriers at both the road side and the central reservations and in some cases three lanes of traffic, however for at least one reason they fall short of motorway standard. They may lack some features that a motorway would have, such as hard shoulders, and may have tighter bends and steeper gradients than would be allowed on a motorway or have established rights of way that cannot be removed. The standard motorway speed limit for cars of 70 mph (113 km/h) also applies to many dual carriageways.[16]

North America

Canada

In some parts of Canada, expressway is synonymous with freeway and is used to mean limited-access divided-highways with no at-grade intersections, with both terms used interchangeably. An example of this is the Gardiner Expressway through downtown Toronto. Where the expressway turns into a 6-lane arterial road (Lake Shore Boulevard) east of the Don River, there is a sign warning of the end of the expressway. The Macdonald–Cartier Freeway would be an example of a route that uses the term freeway, however, that name is being phased out by the Ministry of Transportation. In general, expressways are municipally maintained, while freeways are provincially maintained.

The E. C. Row Expressway in Windsor, Ontario is a controlled-access divided highway with grade-separated interchanges. It continues until Ojibway Parkway at its western terminus and Banwell Road at its eastern terminus, where there are traffic intersections at both.[17]

The Veterans Memorial Parkway in London, Ontario, has intersections instead of interchanges, and thus is not considered a freeway. It was designed to be a limited access highway for the city, but a lack of funding forced it to be built with at-grade intersections. Other examples include the Hanlon Parkway in Guelph and Regional Road 420 in Niagara Falls.

In other locations, such as Alberta and most of Western Canada, an expressway is a high-speed arterial road along the lines of the California definition, while a freeway has no at-grade intersections.

In Quebec, the term freeway is never used, with the terms expressway (in English) and autoroute (in English and French) being preferred. English terms are rare, and only found on bilingual signage of expressways (abbreviated "expy") found in Montreal around bridges and on the Bonaventure Expressway; these signs are controlled by the federal government.

United States

Santa Clara County Route G4 (Montague Expressway), an American expressway under the MUTCD definition

In the United States, an expressway is defined by the federal government’s Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices as a divided highway with partial control of access.[18] In contrast, a freeway is defined as a divided highway with full control of access.[19] The difference between partial and full access control is that expressways may have a limited number of driveways and at-grade intersections (thus making them a form of high-speed arterial road), while access to freeways is allowed only at grade-separated interchanges. Expressways under this definition do not conform to interstate highway standards (which ban all driveways and at-grade intersections) and are therefore usually numbered as state highways or U.S. highways.

This distinction was first developed in 1949 by the Special Committee on Nomenclature of what is now the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO).[20] In turn, the definitions were incorporated into AASHTO's official standards book, the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, which would become the national standards book of the U.S. Department of Transportation under a 1966 federal statute. The same distinction has also been codified into the statutory law of eight states: California,[21] Minnesota,[22] Mississippi,[23] Missouri,[24] Nebraska,[25] North Dakota,[26] Ohio,[27] and Wisconsin.[28]

However, each state codified the federal distinction slightly differently. California expressways do not necessarily have to be divided, though they must have at least partial access control. For both terms to apply, in Wisconsin, a divided highway must be at least four lanes wide; in Missouri, both terms apply only to divided highways at least 10 miles long that are not part of the Interstate Highway System. In North Dakota and Mississippi, an expressway may have "full or partial" access control and "generally" has grade separations at intersections; a freeway is then defined as an expressway with full access control. Ohio's statute is similar, but instead of the vague word "generally," it imposes a requirement that 50% of an expressway's intersections must be grade-separated for the term to apply. Only Minnesota enacted the exact MUTCD definitions, in May 2008.

However, many states around the Great Lakes region and along the Eastern Seaboard have refused to conform their terminology to the federal definition. The following states officially prefer the term expressway instead of freeway to describe what are technically freeways in federal parlance: Connecticut,[29] Florida,[30] Illinois,[31] Maryland,[32] and West Virginia.[33] In those states, it is common to find Interstate highways that bear the name expressway. Ultimately, it is the federal definition that defines a road's classification whether a it is an expressway or freeway no matter the preferred term. No state, for instance, could have what is technically an expressway given Interstate status just because semantically they use the term interchangeably with freeway.

Most expressways under the federal definition have speed limits of 45-55 mph (70–90 km/h) in urban areas and 55-70 mph (90–110 km/h) in rural areas. Urban expressways are usually free of private driveways, but occasional exceptions include direct driveways to gas stations and shopping malls at major intersections (which would never be allowed on a true freeway).

The vast majority of expressways are built by state governments, or by private companies, which then operate them as toll roads pursuant to a license from the state government.

A famous example of a local government getting into the expressway business is Santa Clara County in California, which deliberately built its own expressway system in the 1960s to supplement the freeway system then planned by Caltrans. Although the county originally planned to upgrade the expressways into full-fledged freeways, such a project became politically infeasible after the rise of the tax revolt movement in the mid-1970s, which began with California Proposition 13 in 1978.

See also

References

  1. ^ Elko Traffic Code: "'Controlled access highway' means every highway, street or roadway in respect to which owners or occupants of abutting lands and other persons have no legal right of access except at such points only and in such manner as may be determined by the public authority having jurisdiction over such highway, street or roadway."[dead link]
  2. ^ a b c Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, Section 1A.13 Definitions of Words and Phrases in This Manual: "Expressway—a divided highway with partial control of access." and "Freeway—a divided highway with full control of access."
  3. ^ "Bronx River Parkway - historical overview". http://www.nycroads.com/roads/bronx-river/. Retrieved 2010-04-05. 
  4. ^ Patton, Phil (2008-10-09). "A 100-Year-Old Dream: A Road Just for Cars". New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/12/automobiles/12LIMP.html?_r=1&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink&oref=slogin. Retrieved 2010-04-05. 
  5. ^ Illinois Department of Transportation (2006). "Peoria to Macomb". http://www.peoriatomacomb.com/faq.htm. Retrieved 2006-07-19.  (enclosed within frames in http://www.peoriatomacomb.com). "Expressways are constructed as partial access controlled facilities. This means direct access is allowed for single family residence and field entrances and public roads may be at-grade intersections. Also, interchanges are constructed or planned at most marked routes or high-volume county highways. Commercial properties are not allowed direct access and are brought in off of public or frontage roads."; "Farm machinery is not allowed to be driven on a freeway. Farm machinery would need to be driven on side roads or frontage roads to access fields. With an expressway, farm machinery is allowed to be driven on the highway and field access is generally allowed along the main highway."
  6. ^ Florida Department of Transportation, Florida's Planning Level of Service StandardsPDF (94.2 KiB): "Limited access highways (freeways) are multilane divided highways having a minimum of two lanes for exclusive use of traffic in each direction and full control of ingress and egress; this includes freeways and all fully controlled access roadways."; "Controlled access highways are non-limited access arterial facilities where access connections, median openings and traffic signals are highly regulated."
  7. ^ Manual of Traffic Signs and Markings (MOTSAM) Part 3: Motorways and Expressways, New Zealand Transport Agency, June 2009
  8. ^ CIA World Factbook, India
  9. ^ Dipak Kumar Dash (2009-11-23). "By 2022, govt to lay 18,637km of expressways". Times of India. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/5259102.cms. 
  10. ^ Ashutosh Kumar. "Expressway cost pegged at Rs20 crore/km". Daily News and Analysis. DNA. http://www.dnaindia.com/money/report_expressway-cost-pegged-at-rs20-crore-km_1381235. 
  11. ^ Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport. "Roads in Japan - Arterial High-standard Highways". http://www.mlit.go.jp/road/road_e/contents03/3-1-1.html. Retrieved 2008-04-11. 
  12. ^ Austrian State Route Law
  13. ^ Deutsche Straßenverkehrsordnung, § 18
  14. ^ Dz.U. 2004 nr 128 poz. 1334(Polish)
  15. ^ "CIA - The World Factbook -- Russia". Central Intelligence Agency. https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/rs.html. 
  16. ^ "Rule 124: Speed Limits". The Official Highway Code. TSO. 2007. p. 41. ISBN 9780115528149. http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/TravelAndTransport/Highwaycode/DG_070304. 
  17. ^ The end points can be viewed using Google Earth 42°16′27″N 83°04′43″W / 42.2741°N 83.0786°W / 42.2741; -83.0786, 42°18′05″N 82°53′56″W / 42.3014°N 82.8989°W / 42.3014; -82.8989
  18. ^ Section 1A.13, Paragraph 27, Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, 2003 ed., rev. 1.[1]
  19. ^ Section 1A.13, Paragraph 29, Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, 2003 ed., rev. 1.[2] See also 23 CFR 750.153(k).
  20. ^ American Association of State Highway Officials, AASHO Highway Definitions (Washington D.C., American Association of State Highway Officials, 1962), 1-3.
  21. ^ Cal. Sts. & High. Code § 257.
  22. ^ Minn. Stat., § 160.02, subds. 18b & 19.
  23. ^ Miss. Code Ann., § 65-5-3, subds. (b) and (c).
  24. ^ Mo. Rev. Stat., § 304.010.
  25. ^ Neb. Rev. Stat., §§ 60-618.01 and 60-621.
  26. ^ N.D. Cent. Code, § 24-01-01.1 (2006).
  27. ^ Ohio Rev. Code Ann., § 4511.01, subds. (YY) and (ZZ).
  28. ^ Wis. Stat., §§ 59.84(1)(b) and 346.57(1)(am).
  29. ^ Conn. Gen. Stat. § 13a-20(a).
  30. ^ Fla. Stat. § 348.0002(8).
  31. ^ 625 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/1-119.3.
  32. ^ Md. Transp. Code Ann. § 8-620(c).
  33. ^ W. Va. Code § 17-4-2(a).

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