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The A2 motorway is a motorway in the Netherlands. It is one of the busiest highways in the Netherlands. The road connects the city of Amsterdam, near the Amstel interchange with the Belgian border, near Maastricht (NL) and Liège (B), and the Belgian A25 road. The route of the A2 motorway is shared with two major European routes.
A2 north of Echt: A50 & N322 west of Beuningen: 1970: current from A50 - Nijmegen - Venlo-Roermond - A2 near Maastricht: A 74: 1.893: 1.176 A 61 at German border east of Heide: A73 east of Tegelen: 2010: current Venlo - Germany (Kaldenkirchen) A 76: 27.008: 16.782 A2 at Belgian border southwest of Stein: A 4 at German border east of Bocholtz: 1937
A2 motorway (Belgium), a road connecting Leuven and the Dutch border near Sittard; A2 highway (Botswana), a road connecting Francistown and Kasane; A2 motorway (Bulgaria), a road under construction connecting Sofia and Varna; A2 motorway (Croatia), a road connecting Zagreb and Slovenia; A2 motorway (Cuba), a ring road serving Havana
The busiest Dutch motorway is the A13 between The Hague and Rotterdam, with a traffic volume of 140,000 motor vehicles per day. [9] The province of Utrecht in the centre of the country however, has the busiest motorways on average (almost 100,000 vehicles a day), with major motorways A1, A2, A12, A27 and A28 running through it. [9]
Motorway A15 / A16 near Rotterdam. The busiest Dutch motorway is the A13 between the Hague and Rotterdam, with a traffic volume of 140,000 motor vehicles per day. [24] Utrecht, in the centre of the country, has the busiest motorways on average (almost 100,000 vehicles a day), with major motorways A1, A2, A12, A27 and A28 running through it. [24]
This category contains articles related to motorways (freeways) in the Netherlands - indicated with a red, A-prefixed route number. Motorways are controlled-access highways designed for high-speed vehicular traffic, with all traffic flow and ingress/egress regulated.
S110 is a Dutch city route in Amsterdam. It consists of the Amsteldijk street from Toronto Bridge over the Amstel, running south following the west bank of the Amstel in De Pijp. Past Berlagebrug the route follows President Kennedylaan avenue and Nieuwe Utrechtseweg road and connects to the A2 motorway to Utrecht. [1]
The road runs concurrently with three other motorways over its entire length, starting on Rijksweg 10 (A10) around Amsterdam, then A2 from southern Amsterdam up to Utrecht, and the last part on A12 until it reaches the German border in the east. The highway is maintained by Rijkswaterstaat. [1]