Bundesstraße 96a explained

Country:DEU
Type:B
Route:96a
Length Km:56
Direction A:South
Terminus A:Blankenfelde-Mahlow
Direction B:North
Terminus B:Birkenwerder
States:Brandenburg, Berlin

The Bundesstraße 96a (B96a) is a federal highway in Germany. It begins in Mahlow south of Berlin on the B96 and ends north of Berlin in Birkenwerder, again on the B96. In the GDR it replaced the route of today's B96 running through West Berlin. In the GDR it was called F 96 and after German reunification it was renamed B96a.

The B96 leads from the south near Mahlow to the north towards the city center of Berlin on former West Berlin territory. For this reason, a new route was designated in the GDR, which starts at Mahlow and turns east towards Schönefeld, from there it crosses the Adlergestell in the former East Berlin district of Treptow and crosses the Spree on the Elsenbrücke bridge. In the former district of Friedrichshain, the route runs along Stralauer Allee, Warschauer Straße and today's Petersburger Straße, in the former district of Prenzlauer Berg along today's Danziger Straße and then northwards along Schönhauser Allee. Through the district of Pankow it leads to Birkenwerder, where it meets the route of the B96 again.

Until the construction of the bridge over the Berlin outer ring two kilometers west of Waßmannsdorf in the 1980s, today's B96a did not begin in Mahlow, but in the Glasow district, led via Selchow to Waßmannsdorf and from there—since the early 1990s in four lanes—to the airport in Schönefeld.

With the planned expansion of Berlin-Schönefeld Airport into an international air hub (BER), old plans were taken up again and revised. In 2002, the four-lane link from the northern bypass of Mahlow to the bridge with the Berlin outer ring was expanded. Since 2007, the expressway from there via Waßmannsdorf to Schönefeld has been passable with four lanes throughout.

The Berlin-Schönefeld Airport had already been connected to East Berlin in four lanes. From the Treptow junction on the A 117 motorway, the route continues as a motor road without intersections and ends at the broad Adlergestell, which leads into the city of Berlin.

See also