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The Trans-Kalahari Corridor is a paved highway corridor that provides a direct route from the port of Walvis Bay and Windhoek in central Namibia, through Botswana, to Pretoria in Gauteng province in South Africa. It initially cost approximately 850 million Namibian dollars (US$115 million) and was officially opened in 1998.
Numbered routes of South Africa National routes in South Africa are a class of trunk roads and freeways which connect major cities. They form the highest category in the South African route numbering scheme , and are designated with route numbers beginning with "N", from N1 to N18.
After 4.7 kilometres, the M9 changes its street name to Florence Ribeiro Avenue (formerly Queen Wilhelmina Avenue [6]) and forms the boundary between the suburbs of Groenkloof to the west and Waterkloof to the east, continuing north-north-west.
The City of Tshwane (Pretoria metropolitan area) like most South African metropolitan areas uses Metropolitan or "M" routes for important intra-city routes, a layer below National (N) roads and Regional (R) roads. Each city's M roads are independently numbered.
The N4 road westbound near Middelburg, Mpumalanga The N4 road eastbound at the interchange with the R556 road near Modderspruit in North West.. The N4 is a national route in South Africa that runs from Skilpadshek on the Botswana border, past Rustenburg, Pretoria, eMalahleni and Mbombela, to Komatipoort on the Mozambique border.
The M4 road is a metropolitan route in the City of Tshwane in Gauteng, South Africa.It connects Pretoria with Hartbeespoort. [1] [2] [3] [4] The route is a toll road ...
The M16 route begins in Lynnwood Manor, at an interchange with the M6 route (Lynnwood Road) and the N1 highway (Pretoria Eastern Bypass).It begins by heading north as Meiring Naude Road, parallel to the N1 highway, meeting the south-western terminus of the M14 route (Lynburn Road), to fly over the N4 highway (Maputo Corridor) and reach a T-junction with Cussonia Avenue on the southern side of ...
The M1 route begins at a junction with the M2 route (Nana Sita Street; Charlotte Maxeke Street) and the western terminus of the M6 route (Visagie Street). It heads northwards as Es'kia Mphahlele Drive (formerly DF Malan Drive [5]), separating Pretoria West in the west from Pretoria CBD in the east and meeting the R104 route (WF Nkomo Street) and the M22 route at the next junction.