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  2. Highways in Bulgaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highways_in_Bulgaria

    The initial plan for construction of motorways dates back to 1973, when the government of Socialist Bulgaria approved a resolution to build a motorway ring, encompassing the country and consisting of three motorways - Trakia, Hemus and Cherno More. [6] By the democratic changes in 1990, a total of 273 km of motorways had been built in Bulgaria. [7]

  3. Hemus motorway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemus_motorway

    The Hemus motorway (Bulgarian: Автомагистрала „Хемус“, Avtomagistrala "Hemus") or Haemus motorway, designated A2, is a partially built motorway in Bulgaria. Its planned length is 418 km, of which 191 km are in operation as of October 2022 [update] . [ 1 ]

  4. Botevgrad-Vidin expressway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Botevgrad-Vidin_expressway

    Highways in Bulgaria The Vidin-Botevgrad expressway ( Bulgarian : Скоростен път „Видин-Ботевград“ , romanized : Skorosten pat "Vidin-Botevgrad" ) is a planned expressway in Bulgaria , that will link the A2 Hemus motorway with Vidin and the New Europe Bridge , at the Danube border crossing to Romania .

  5. Via Carpathia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Via_Carpathia

    Parts of the M30 motorway in Hungary. The Hungarian section opened to public in October 2021 by completing the missing link between Miskolc and the Slovak border. [7] R4 expressway in Slovakia [8] Western part of A6 motorway in Romania (from Calafat to Lugoj) New Europe Bridge over Danube, from Calafat, Romania to Vidin, Bulgaria

  6. Bebresh Viaduct - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bebresh_Viaduct

    Bebresh Viaduct (виадукт „Бебреш“) is a girder bridge part of the Bulgarian Hemus (or A2) motorway, located in Vitinya Pass in Stara Planina 60 km east of Sofia, at 650 m above sea level. It was opened in 1985 and was designed by the team of D. Dragoev, P. Minchev and Y. Todorov of Moststroy AD.

  7. European route E79 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_route_E79

    Construction of two-way tunnel on Route E79 in Greece (Completed) E79 in Bulgaria (motorway stretch) E79 in Bulgaria (non-motorway stretch) European route E 79 is a road part of the International E-road network. It begins in Miskolc, Hungary and ends in Thessaloniki, Greece, also running through Romania and Bulgaria. The road is 1,300 km (810 ...

  8. Veliko Tarnovo–Ruse motorway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veliko_Tarnovo–Ruse_motorway

    Along with the Hemus motorway (A2), the Veliko Tarnovo–Ruse motorway aims to provide motorway connection between Sofia and Bucharest, the capitals of Bulgaria and Romania. Also, it follows the route of European route E85 and Pan-European Corridor IX. In March 2015, a tender for conceptual design was announced.

  9. European route E772 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_route_E772

    European route E772 is a class B road, part of the International E-road network in Bulgaria.It connects the two sections of the Hemus motorway (A2) constructed so far, and is part of one of the most important transport corridors in the country: from the capital Sofia in the west to Varna and the northern Bulgarian Black Sea Coast in the east.