European highway E134 goes from Haugesund over the Hardangervidda moutain plateu ending at Drammen near Oslo. All places are in Norway. In the winter the weather conditions often can be so rough that the road must be closed temporarily. County Rogaland Landscape Haugaland Municipality NO-1106 Administrative centre Haugesund Mayor (2005) Petter Steen jr. ... County Oslo NO-03 Landscape Viken Municipality NO-0301 Administrative centre Oslo Mayor (2004) Per Ditlev-Simonsen (H) Official language form Neutral Area - Total - Land - Percentage Ranked 224 454 km² 426 km² 0. ...
External links
Road conditions (in Norwegian only)
Word list: Midlertidig stengt = Temporarily closed Kolonnekjøring = Drivning in line after a snow plough truck only. Nattestengt = Closed by night Vegarbeid = Road work Kjøreforhold = Driving conditions Snø / Snødekke = Snowy road Is / isdekke = Icy road Glatt / glatte = Slippery Bart = Bare road
The road was Europeanroute E76 before 1992, when the numbering system of Europeanroutes in the Nordic countries was revised.
Due to local wishes and steadily increasing of the road standard, from the end of the 1990s, it again received Europeanroute status, with the number E134.
The route has many tunnels, especially in the mountainous sections, and also in the western part, along the fjord Åkrafjorden, where is passes the Langfossen water fall.
Europe has a system of Europeanroutes that are numbered E1 and up.
The route numbering system, defined by UNECE since 1975, went through a major change in 1992 and is now as follows (text and layout slightly modified from the original for clarity of understanding):
These roads are signed by their new numbers from Denmark and southward, though, as are other Europeanroutes within Scandinavia.