List of E-roads in the Netherlands
| European routes in the Netherlands | |
|---|---|
|
European routes in the Netherlands highlighted in red | |
| System information | |
| Maintained by Rijkswaterstaat[1] | |
| Highway names | |
| European routes: | European route E nn (E nn) |
| System links | |

E-road marker on Dutch road sign
This is a list of the European Routes, or E-road highways, that run through the Netherlands. The current network is signposted according to the 1985 system revision, and contains seven Class A roads and six Class B roads within the country. Almost without exception, these are motorways that also carry various national A-numbers (for Autosnelweg). Only two small stretches of the E25 and the E30 are provincial roads (the N220 and N211 respectively).[2]
History
The original E-road numbering of 1957 included ten routes, but was supplanted by the 1985 revision.[3]
Class-A European routes
| Number | Length (km)[4] | Length (mi) | Southern or western terminus | Northern or eastern terminus | Formed | Removed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 140 | 90 | Amsterdam | Belgium | — | — | Route: Amsterdam (Southern ring road) - Belgium (via The Hague, Rotterdam and Breda) | |
| 260 | 160 | Amsterdam | Germany | — | — | Route: Amsterdam (Western ring road) - Germany (via Wieringen, Heerenveen and Groningen)[5] | |
| 275 | 171 | Hook of Holland | Belgium | — | — | Route: Hook of Holland - Belgium (via Rotterdam, Utrecht, Eindhoven and Maastricht) | |
| 230 | 140 | Hook of Holland | Germany | — | — | Route: Hook of Holland; England - Germany (via The Hague, Utrecht and Deventer) | |
| 135 | 84 | Ridderkerk | Germany | — | — | Route: Ridderkerk - Germany (via Gorinchem and Nijmegen) | |
| 80 | 50 | Belgium | Germany | — | — | Route: Belgium - Germany (via Eindhoven and Venlo) | |
| 130 | 80 | Amsterdam | Germany | — | — | Route: Amsterdam (Northeastern ring road) - Germany (via Utrecht and Arnhem) |
- Class-A European routes
-

E 25, E 30 and E 35 interchange south of Utrecht
-

Galecopperbrug carrying E 30 and E 35 in Utrecht
-

E 22 on the Afsluitdijk
-
E 19 and E 30 in The Hague
Class-B European routes
| Number | Length (km)[6] | Length (mi) | Southern or western terminus | Northern or eastern terminus | Formed | Removed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 40 | 20 | Amsterdam | Amersfoort | — | — | ||
| 180 | 110 | Amersfoort | Groningen | — | — | Route: Amersfoort - Groningen (via Zwolle and Assen) | |
| 45 | 28 | Hoogeveen | Germany | — | — | ||
| 65 | 40 | Breda | Utrecht | — | — | Route: Breda - Utrecht (via Gorinchem) | |
| 155 | 96 | Flushing | Eindhoven | — | — | Route: Flushing - Eindhoven (via Bergen op Zoom and Breda) | |
| 35 | 22 | Belgium | Germany | — | — | Route: Belgium - Germany (via Geleen and Heerlen) |
- Class-B European routes
-

E 314 and E 25 at the Kerensheide interchange
See also
- List of motorways in the Netherlands
- Roads portal
- Netherlands portal
References
- ↑ "Wat voor wegen zijn er in Nederland en wie is de wegbeheerder". De Rijksoverheid. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
- ↑ nl:Lijst van E-wegen door Nederland
- ↑ Elsevier Atlas van Nederland, België en Luxemburg, samengesteld door de Winkler Prins redactie, Amsterdam/Brussel 1960.
- ↑ Shell Stratenboek van Nederland. Editie 55 (2008); only the sections within the Netherlands are given here.
- ↑ The E22 officially connects from Britain to the Netherlands, but no ferry connection exists at this moment.
- ↑ Shell Stratenboek van Nederland. Editie 55 (2008); only the sections within the Netherlands are given here.
External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to European roads in the Netherlands. |
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, September 20, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.
