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The Laredo–Nuevo Laredo Metropolitan area has a total of 636,516 inhabitants according to the INEGI Census of 2010 [4] and the United States Census estimate of 2010. [5] According to World Gazetteer this urban agglomeration ranked 157th largest in North and South America in 2010 with an estimated population of 675,481.
Nuevo Laredo (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈnweβo laˈɾeðo]) is a city in the Municipality of Nuevo Laredo in the Mexican state of Tamaulipas. The city lies on the banks of the Rio Grande, across from Laredo, United States. The 2010 census population of the city was 373,725. [1]
Through most of Tamaulipas and Nuevo León, it is a freeway and is essentially a southern continuation of U.S. Interstate 35. Highway 85 has two alternate toll routes ; both are named Carretera Federal 85D; one is from Nuevo Laredo to Monterrey (123.1 kilometers MXN$177) and Pachuca to Mexico City (45.8 kilometers MXN$33). Highway 85D has wider ...
Laredo-World Trade: LWT: I-69W US 59 Loop 20 (Bob Bullock Loop) Laredo, Texas: Nuevo Laredo Fed. 85D: Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas: Laredo Bridge 4; no cars or pedestrians - commercial vehicles only 2000 Laredo Bridge 1: LAR: Convent Avenue Laredo, Texas: Nuevo Laredo Avenida Guerrero Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas: Laredo Bridge 1; no trucks 1898 Laredo ...
Mexican Federal Highway 85 from Nuevo Laredo - Monterrey. Carretera Federal 85D is the designation for toll highways paralleling Federal Highway 85.Two roads are designated Highway 85D, one from Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, to Monterrey, Nuevo León, known as Autopista Monterrey–Nuevo Laredo, and the other from Pachuca, Hidalgo, to Mexico City, known as Autopista Pachuca–Ciudad de México.
Laredo (/ l ə ˈ r eɪ d oʊ / lə-RAY-doh; Spanish:) is a city in the U.S. state of Texas and seat of Webb County, on the north bank of the Rio Grande in South Texas, across from Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, Mexico.
The current enclave in Nuevo Laredo was constructed in the 1960s, during the municipal administration of Ernesto Ferrara Ferrara, to concentrate prostitution activities within a controlled zone. [2] A number of brothels and bars catering to prostitution still operate in the downtown area outside Boy's Town with the tacit approval of the government.
The Laredo Convent Avenue Port of Entry is located at the Gateway to the Americas International Bridge. [4] Since 1889, a bridge connected Laredo, Texas with Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas at this location. For many years, this was the only crossing for vehicular and pedestrian traffic between the two cities.