Swiss National Bike Routes
The Swiss National Bike Routes (German: Nationale Velorouten, French: Itinéraires à vélo nationaux, Italian: Percorsi nazionali) are the national cycling route network of Switzerland. There are currently 9 such long-distance cycling routes criss-crossing the Swiss nation and these were established mainly to promote bicycle tourism.
The routes are signposted with red signposts. National routes are characterized by single-digit numbers to tell them apart from the Swiss regional routes. Each national route is published in a guidebook in German and French with map sections at 1:100 000 scale with technical and tourist information.
Nine national and many regional routes were established. The nine national routes are:
- Rhone Route : Andermatt - Geneva, 309 km (26 km unpaved road ), 4360 meters of altitude
- Rhine Route : Andermatt - Oberalp Pass - Chur - Schaffhausen - Basel, 424 km
- North -South Route : Basel - Chiasso, 363 km
- Alpine Panorama Route : St.Margrethen - Aigle, 483 km
- Mittelland Route : Roman Horn - Lausanne, 369 km
- Graubünden Route : Chur - Bellinzona, 260 km
- Jura Route : Basel - Nyon, 275 km
- Aare Route : Upper Forest - Koblenz, 305 km
- Lakes Route : Montreux - Rorschach, 497 km
Note that, these routes are often follow paved roads and paths, but they also contain sections that are not yet paved. Only the Route 4 (Alpine Panorama Route) is paved throughout.
See also
- EuroVelo
- LF-routes, the national cycling route network of the Netherlands.
- National Cycle Network, the national cycling route network of the United Kingdom.
References
External links
- National routes Schweiz Mobil - Veloland