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Map of the German autobahn network. The volume of traffic in Germany, especially goods transportation, is at a very high level due to its central location in Europe. In the past few decades, much of the freight traffic shifted from rail to road, which led the Federal Government to introduce a motor toll for trucks in 2005. Individual road usage ...
From 2009 Germany has embarked on a massive widening and rehabilitation project, expanding the lane count of many of its major arterial routes, such as the A 5 in the southwest and A 8 going east–west. Most sections of Germany's autobahns have two or three, sometimes four lanes in each direction in addition to an emergency lane (hard shoulder ...
Germany's Bundesstraßen network has a total length of about 40,000 km. German Bundesstraßen are labelled with rectangular yellow signs with black numerals, as opposed to the white-on-blue markers of the Autobahn controlled-access highways. Bundesstraßen, like autobahns, are maintained by the federal agency of the Transport Ministry.
B 54 to B 68 in Western Germany (North Rhine-Westphalia) B 69 to B 83 in Northern Germany (Lower Saxony and Schleswig-Holstein) B 84 to B 100 in Central Germany (Saxony and Thuringia) B 101 to B 112 in Northeastern Germany (Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern) R 113 to R 125 in Pomerania and Silesia (no longer in Germany)
Autobahns in Germany: One-digit roads are main lines; Two-digit roads are geographically distributed by region: 1 East and Berlin; 2 North (coast regions), Hamburg, Bremen, Kiel, Rostock
General map of Germany. This is a complete list of the 2,056 cities and towns in Germany (as of 1 January 2024). [1] [2] There is no distinction between town and city in Germany; a Stadt is an independent municipality (see Municipalities of Germany) that has been given the right to use that title.
Map of the German Unification Transport Projects. The German Reunification Transport Projects [1] or German Unity Transport Projects [2] (German: Verkehrsprojekte Deutsche Einheit), commonly known by their German initials VDE, are a set of major construction projects to increase and improve transport links between Eastern and Western Germany after German reunification.
Transdev Germany is the largest private operator of buses and passenger trains in Germany. Also Netinera (previously Arriva Deutschland ) operates several railway lines in Germany. In 2018, public sector funding accounted for 25.6% of the cost of short-distance passenger transport including all rail and bus services. [ 9 ]