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The motorway is part of the Venice-Trieste-Ljubljana-Budapest-Lviv-Kyiv line Central-East Europe Corridor V, and European route E71, E79, E573 and E579. This is one of the most important route of the Hungarian motorway and road network, the southwest–north-eastern diagonal main line of traffic forming part of Budapest.
Speed Limits in Hungary based on road type and vehicle category Map of planned motorway and expressway network in Hungary See also: Roads in Hungary Hungary has a total of 159,568 km (99,150 mi) of public roads, of which 70,050 km (43,530 mi) are paved (including 1481 km of motorways , as of 2016); and 89,518 km (55,620 mi) are unpaved (2005 etc.):
("State Motorway Management Plc."), the total length of the Hungarian motorway system was 1,400.6 kilometers in 2013. [1] The construction of the Hungarian motorway system started in 1964 with M7, which finished in 1975 between Budapest and Lake Balaton. The total length of the system reached 200 km in 1980, 500 km in 1998, and 1000 km in 2007.
M60 motorway (Hungary) M70 motorway (Hungary) M85 expressway (Hungary) M86 expressway (Hungary) M. M49 expressway (Hungary) V. Via Carpathia
This is a list of the European Routes, or E-road highways, that run through the Hungary.The current network is signposted according to the 2016 system revision, and contains seven Class A roads and three Class B roads within the country.
The M3 motorway (Hungarian: M3-as autópálya) is a Hungarian motorway connecting Budapest to Nyíregyháza. It will eventually connect Budapest to the Ukrainian border. Two other motorways branch off it, the M30 (connecting the M3 to Miskolc) and the M35 (connecting the M3 to Debrecen). The M3 follows the route of route 3, and, later, route 4.
M4 is a Hungarian expressway (constructed to motorway standards on its final section before reaching the border) which will, upon completion, connect Budapest to Oradea and further Romanian cities. The route will travel in Hungary through Cegléd, Szolnok, Karcag, Püspökladány, Berettyóújfalu, and Nagykereki before reaching the Romanian ...
The M1 motorway (Hungarian: M1-es autópálya) is a toll motorway in northwestern Hungary, connecting Budapest to Győr and Vienna. The first section of the motorway opened in the 1970s, reaching the Austrian border at Hegyeshalom in 1996. It follows the route of the old Route 1 one-lane highway.