Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Churchill–Roosevelt Highway, sometimes refers to as CRH, is the major east–west highway on Trinidad island in Trinidad and Tobago.. It runs for 35 km (22 mi) from Barataria in the west (where it joins the Beetham Highway) to Wallerfield in the east (south of Arima) where it ends in the former US Army base on Fort Read.
Transport in Trinidad and Tobago The Claude Noel Highway , sometimes referred to as CNH, is one of the major west–east highways in Trinidad and Tobago , named after Claude Noel , it is the only highway in Tobago .
The South Trunk Road is a major arterial road on the island of Trinidad, in Trinidad and Tobago.It runs for 13.5 km (8.4 mi). It connects the San Fernando Bypass at the Cipero Street interchange to the Sir Solomon Hochoy Highway at Mon Desir, bisecting the communities along the southern outskirts of San Fernando.
Western main road cuts through several towns An intersection of Churchill–Roosevelt Highway and Uriah Butler Highway, 2009 Old and new bridges in Trinidad side by side. Trinidad and Tobago, a country that relies heavily on industrialisation and tourism, has various transport systems. The nation drives on the left, and has a network of roads ...
Trinidad and Tobago highway infobox templates (3 P) Pages in category "Roads in Trinidad and Tobago" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total.
Map of Trinidad and Tobago. List of cities, towns, ... Eastern Main Road, San Juan, in the heart of the East–West Corridor. Name Location (Region/municipality)
The Eastern Main Road is a major road in Trinidad and Tobago running from Port of Spain in the west to Manzanilla in the east. The towns of the East–West Corridor are strung along its route. Until the construction of the Churchill–Roosevelt Highway (in 1941) and the Beetham Highway (in 1955–56) the Eastern Main Road was the main route of ...
The highway was named for Sir Solomon Hochoy, [1] the first Caribbean-born Governor of Trinidad and Tobago and the first Governor General of Trinidad and Tobago. Originally constructed as a two-lane highway in the early 1970s, it was expanded to a four-lane dual carriageway in the late 1970s.