Maritsa motorway

Maritsa motorway shield

Maritsa motorway
Автомагистрала „Марица“

Maritsa motorway highlighted in red and yellow
Route information
Part of E80
Length: 117 km (73 mi)
117 km (73 mi) planned
Major junctions
From: Chirpan,
To: Kapitan Andreevo ; Turkey
Location
Major cities: Dimitrovgrad, Haskovo, Svilengrad
Highway system
Motorways in Bulgaria

The Maritsa motorway (Bulgarian: Автомагистрала „Марица“, Avtomagistrala "Maritsa"), designated A4, is a motorway in Bulgaria, part of the Pan-European Corridor IV, which connects Central Europe with Asia. The project links Trakia motorway (A1), at the town of Chirpan, and Kapitan Andreevo, at the Turkish border. The planned completion of the last remaining stretch of the motorway was in 2013,[1] but a delay occurred[2] and the complete motorway enterеd service in October 2015.[3]

The motorway is named after Maritsa River.

History

In October 2010, a 31 km section of the Maritsa motorway between the towns of Harmanli and Lyubimets officially opened to traffic.[4] The new interchange at Kapitan Petvo Voyvoda neighbourhood of Svilengrad, providing direct connection with the border crossing to Greece, also opened in October 2010. During construction, 6000-year-old Neolithic remains were found near Haskovo.[5] The bypass of Kapitan Andreevo village in the border area entered in service in August 2014.[6] The construction of Haskovo—Harmanli section began in July 2011 and was completed on 28 May 2015.[7] A 8.6 kilometres (5.3 mi) long second carriageway near Svilengrad was inaugurated on 7 June 2015, while the other carriageway had been built during the 1980s.[8] The last remaining section, between Chirpan and Haskovo, entered in service in on 29 October 2015.[3]

The construction of the Chirpan-Haskovo and the Haskovo-Harmanli sections of the motorway were co-funded by EU funds allocated for Bulgaria,[9] while a small section at the Turkish border was co-funded with a loan from the IBRD.[10] Its route runs parallel to the existing major road 8, which is mainly two-lane and carried much of the road freight to and from Turkey and the Middle East. The completion of the Maritsa motorway attempts to reduce this congestion.

Exits

Exit km Destinations Notes
0 (Sofia, Plovdiv, Stara Zagora, Yambol, Burgas) In service
36.6 Haskovo, Dimitrovgrad In service
66 Simeonovgrad, Harmanli In service
70.3 Topolovgrad, Harmanli In service
88 Lyubimets In service
99 Svilengrad-west; Greece In service
102 Svilengrad In service
114 Kapitan Andreevo In service
117 Kapitan Andreevo Border Crossing; Turkey Edirne D100 , Istanbul In service

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/30/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.