List of motorways in Russia
This is a list of Russian federal highways and the motorway portions of them. Note that federal highways in their entirety have often been mistakenly called "motorways" in English, even though they are traditionally two-lane physically undivided roads (i.e. not controlled access highways), due to their traditional name "Avtomagistral" (Автомагистраль) which can be translated to "motorway".
Name or road number | Total length of the road number | Motorway |
---|---|---|
M2 | 720 km | 21–178 km |
M4 | ~1550 km | 18–120 km; 492-544 km; 633–715 km; 1362–1374 km |
M5 | 1879 km | 10 km in Samara Oblast 24 km[1] in Chelyabinsk Oblast |
Nizhniy Novgorod bypass ( M7) | 84 km (project) | 0–45 km |
M8 | 1271 km | 96–115 km |
M9 | 610 km | 19–118 km |
M11 | 684 km (under construction) | 15–149 km; 208–684 km |
Mezhdunarodnoye shosse | 3.3 km | Entire |
Saint Petersburg Ring Road | 142.2 km | Entire |
Western Rapid Diameter | 46.6 km | Entire |
R384 [2] | 190 km | 61 km in Kemerovo Oblast |
R242 | 354 km | 13–33 km |
Motorways under construction or planned
Name or road number | Length | Construction period |
---|---|---|
Reconstruction of M1 in Moscow oblast | ~150 km | 2008–2017 |
Reconstruction of M3 in Moscow oblast | ~90 km | 1998–2019 |
Reconstruction of M4 | ~1400 km | 1984–2018 |
Reconstruction of M5 in Moscow oblast | ~120 km | 1987–2016 |
Gallery
See also
References
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-01-19. Retrieved 2013-06-25.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- "First motorway opened in Kemerovo oblast". // kuzdor.ru. Archived from the original on 2012-12-29. Retrieved 2012-11-23.
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