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E 66 - Oud Metha Road D 95 - Baghdad Street/Cairo Street Jebel Ali Al Habab Road Dubai-Al Ain Road (E 66) 2 E 311 (Sheikh Mohammad Bin Zayed Road; formerly known as Emirates Road) 87.3 mi (140.5 km) 2001 Jebel Ali Al Habab Oud Metha Ras Al Khor 3 E 44: 73.3 mi (118 km) Al Madam Roundabout Dubai-Al Ain Road E 311 E 77: 4 E 66
The project is being developed in three phases. Work on Phase 1, which began in February 2006, was intended to create a sector that starts along E 66 (Dubai–Al Ain Road) and extends inward towards E 77 (Jebel Ali–Al-Habab Road). Phase II of the project, which began in January 2007, involved linking the bypass with E 88 (Al Dhaid Road) in ...
The purpose of these routes is to provide a detour in the event that the parent route is impassable, due to either a traffic jams, traffic collision, or road closure (for a variety of reasons). Sometimes these routes are signed as a prefixed or suffixed numbered road , making them a type of special route .
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Roads & Transport Authority (RTA) (Arabic: هيئة الطرق والمواصلات) is a Government of Dubai roads & transportation authority in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. It was founded in 2005 and is responsible for planning and executing transport and traffic projects, along with legislation and strategic plans of transportation in Dubai ...
The road connects the city of Dubai to the town of Hatta, an exclave of the emirate of Dubai. E 44 assumes multiple names; in Dubai, the road is named Al Khail Road, between E 311 and D 68, Ras al Khor Road between D 68 and E 311, Al Aweer Road between E 311 and E 77, and Dubai-Hatta Highway for the rest of the road. [1]
E 311 has been called Sheikh Mohammad Bin Zayed Road since January 2013 [1] and is commonly known as SMBZ Road. [2] Prior to that it was called Emirates Road, but that name is now given to E 611, which was previously Dubai Bypass Road. [3] It was originally designed by the Dubai Municipality to
Jumeirah Road sign. D-routes connect localities within the city of Dubai and are identified by the emblem of a fort, the letter D and a two or three digit number. Considerably shorter in length than the average E-route, D-routes provide an intra-city network of roads and streets.