2+2 road explained

A 2+2 road is a specific type of dual-carriageway that exists primarily in Ireland,[1] Sweden,[2] Estonia and Finland,[3] consisting of two lanes in each direction separated by a steel cable barrier.

These roads do not have hard shoulders and therefore cannot be designated as motorways in the future. However, they may be designated as limited-access roads, as such roads do not require the physical standard of motorways to be designated as expressways. The Irish variant has 3.5adj=midNaNadj=mid lanes[4] where there are a number of Swedish variants[5] some with 3.25adj=midNaNadj=mid lanes.

Junctions are generally at-grade roundabouts and minor roads cross under or over the mainline without connecting. They are also known as "type 2 dual-carriageways" by the Irish National Roads Authority. These roads look similar to expressways, except that expressways often have interchanges, large medians or concrete barriers between traffic.

History

First Irish 2+2

In Ireland first purpose-built road of this type opened in December 2007[6] [7] as a new greenfield section of the N4 national primary route which joins Dublin to Sligo.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Google Maps. Google Maps.
  2. Web site: Google Maps. Google Maps.
  3. Web site: Google Maps. Google Maps.
  4. Web site: Irish Design Standard (pdf) . 2013-07-28 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303215918/http://nrastandards.nra.ie/road-design-construction-standards/func-download/456/chk97bcc7e21a2c56a21e6b025d3f931b49/no_html1 . 2016-03-03 . dead .
  5. [:sv:2+2-väg#Olika typer|Swedish 2+2 Types (In Swedish)]
  6. Web site: N4 Drumsna Longford (Dromod Roosky).
  7. Web site: Ireland's First 2+2 Road Type Opens in Dromod Roosky. https://web.archive.org/web/20090726065715/http://www.nra.ie/News/PressReleases/htmltext%2C11151%2Cen.html. dead. 26 July 2009.