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Vejdirektoratet or the Danish Road Directorate is responsible for the national road network of Denmark, which comprises motorways, a number of main roads and many of the country's bridges – a total of about 4,000 kilometres.
The Danish national road network (Danish: Primærrute) is a numbering system for roads in Denmark developed by the Danish Road Directorate (Danish: Vejdirektoratet). The roads are numbered from 6 to 99 and 01 to 04 for ring roads with Danish national road status. There are currently 37 Danish national roads, and 59 is currently the highest number.
Danish motorways are developed by the Danish Road Directorate (a state-owned company) who maintain a list of motorway projects in development and planning (in Danish). [1] E45 Sønderjyske Motorvej (Kolding V - Motorway junction Kolding) (extension 4 to 6 lanes and 6 to 8 lanes) (EIA-assessment) (2028)
Road signs in Copenhagen.. This is a list of road signs in Denmark.Road signs in Denmark are regulated by the Road Traffic Act (Færdselsloven). [1] The design and definitions of road signs is delegated to the executive, according to §95 ¶1 of the Road Traffic Act. [1]
By royal resolution on 23 January 2021, the Ministry of the Interior and Housing was established, and the authority's areas of responsibility for housing and construction were transferred to the newly established Danish Housing and Planning Authority and the authority's name was changed to Danish Civil Aviation and Railway Authority. [2]
San Jose, Sunnyvale, Gilroy, Morgan Hill, and Los Gatos; most of Santa Clara County. Split from 415 on January 1, 1959; overlaid by 669 on November 20, 2012 415: San Francisco, San Rafael, Novato; all of San Francisco County, most of Marin County and a small portion of northern San Mateo County
County routes are typically designated with a letter (A, B, D, E, G, J, N, R, or S, depending on the region of the state, with several counties split between two region prefixes) followed by a number (example: G2). Therefore, the county routes are sorted alphabetically, from the northernmost region of California to the southernmost region.
Its phone system is fully integrated into the Swiss system. 42 – formerly assigned to Czechoslovakia, later to its breakup successors (CZ, SK) until 1997; 420 – Czech Republic; 421 – Slovakia; 422 – unassigned; 423 – Liechtenstein (formerly at 41 (75)) 424 – unassigned; 425 – unassigned; 426 – unassigned; 427 – unassigned; 428 ...