Country: | MYS | ||||||||
Type: | E | ||||||||
Route: | 14 | ||||||||
Marker Image: |
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Map Custom: | yes | ||||||||
Map Notes: | EDL in red | ||||||||
Alternate Name: | Johor Bahru Eastern Dispersal Link Expressway | ||||||||
Maint: | the Malaysian Public Works Department | ||||||||
Length Km: | 8.1 | ||||||||
Length Round: | 1 | ||||||||
Direction A: | North | ||||||||
Terminus A: | North–South Expressway Southern Route at Pandan-Tebrau, Johor | ||||||||
Junction: | Tebrau Highway Johor Bahru East Coast Highway Johor Bahru East Coast Parkway Johor Bahru Inner Ring Road | ||||||||
Direction B: | South | ||||||||
Terminus B: | Bukit Timah Expressway at the Johor–Singapore Causeway | ||||||||
Formed: | 2007 | ||||||||
History: | Completed in 2012 | ||||||||
Destinations: | Permas Jaya, Kampung Bakar Batu, Pasir Pelangi, Stulang |
The Johor Bahru Eastern Dispersal Link Expressway [1] is a controlled-access highway entirely within Johor Bahru, Johor, Malaysia. The 8.1abbr=offNaNabbr=off expressway connects the end of the North–South Expressway Southern Route at Pandan to the Johor–Singapore Causeway in the city centre. The expressway was constructed to allow cross-border traffic to bypass the city centre and reduce congestion along Tebrau Highway, the existing main route to the causeway. The construction costs of the expressway is RM 1 billion.[2]
In August 2012, the Malaysian government decided that it will acquire the expressway from Malaysia Resources Corp Bhd (MRCB).[3]
The Kilometre Zero of the entire expressway is located after the CIQ Interchange before the Sultan Iskandar Building towards the Malaysia-Singapore border.
The construction of the Johor Bahru Eastern Dispersal Link was proposed in 2004 in the Ninth Malaysia Plan (2006–2010). The construction began on 1 October 2007 and was completed on 20 March 2012. On 1 April 2012, the highway was opened to public, delayed from its scheduled launch in the first quarter of 2012.[4]
Houses along Jalan Sri Pelangi Satu and Jalan Sri Pelangi Dua had been reclaimed by the government due to the necessity to use the land for the project. The compensation sum given to the owners of the houses was considered low by many of the residents there. However, no further adjustments was made to the sum.
Another major controversy is that only the motorists who use the CIQ complex to travel to Singapore will be charged the toll; whether or not the EDL is used. However, on 30 August 2012, five months after the EDL was opened to public, the controversy was resolved when the government announced that they will take over the EDL from MRCB. On 1 January 2018, toll collections at JB Eastern Dispersal Link was abolished and replaced by Road Charge on every Singapore car that enters Malaysia.
Below is a list of interchanges (exits), laybys and rest and service areas along the Johor Bahru Eastern Dispersal Link Expressway. The exits are arranged in ascending numerical order from north to south.
The entire section is located within the district of Johor Bahru, Johor.
Location | km | Exit | Interchange | Destinations | Notes/Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Woodlands | Johor–Singapore Causeway | South Singapore Woodlands Checkpoint Bukit Timah Expressway | Start (northbound)/end (southbound) of causeway | ||
Singapore Woodlands border | |||||
Johor–Singapore Causeway ASEAN Singapore–Malaysia Border | |||||
Malaysia Johor Darul Takzim Johor Bahru district border | |||||
Johor Bahru | Johor–Singapore Causeway | End (northbound)/start (southbound) of causeway | |||
0.0 | Sultan Iskandar Building | Johor Bahru checkpoint | |||
Johor Bahru Eastern Dispersal Expressway Southern end of expressway EDL border limit | |||||
Johor Bahru | 1401 | CIQ Interchange | Johor Bahru Inner Ring Road East Jalan Sultan Ibrahim Sultan Iskandar Building West Sultanah Aminah Hospital | Stack interchange | |
Bakar Batu–CIQ Flyover | Northbound start of flyover | ||||
Kampung Bakar Batu | Southbound end of flyover Southbound entrance only from Jalan Stulang Darat | ||||
1402 | ___Interchange | Jalan Pasir Pelangi North Taman Sentosa Johor Bahru city centre | Northbound entrance & exit only | ||
1403A | Bakar Batu Interchange | Johor Bahru East Coast Parkway East Permas Jaya Pasir Gudang | Northbound entrance & exit only | ||
Bakar Batu–CIQ Flyover | End (northbound)/start (southbound) of flyover | ||||
4.6 | 1403B | Bakar Batu Interchange | Jalan Pasir Pelangi South Kampung Bakar Batu Permas Jaya Pasir Gudang | Northbound entrance & southbound exit only | |
Mid Valley Southkey Interchange | Mid Valley Southkey | Interchange Operational since April 2019 | |||
Pandan | Sungai Sebulong Bridge | ||||
Anak Sungai Sebulong Bridge | |||||
6.6 | Pandan rest and service area | Southbound only | |||
7.7 | 1404 | Pandan Interchange | Tebrau Highway Northeast Kota Tinggi Mersing Southwest Tampoi Johor Bahru city centre | Cloverleaf interchange No southbound exit to northeast direction | |
Johor Bahru Eastern Dispersal Expressway Northern end of expressway EDL border limit | |||||
North–South Expressway Southern Route Southern end of expressway PLUS border limit | |||||
Pandan | North-South Expressway Southern Route Northwest Bandar Dato' Onn Setia Tropika Kempas Malacca Kuala Lumpur |