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Encyclopedia > Jingbao Expressway

The Jingbao Expressway is a new expressway slated for construction in 2005.


It would link central Beijing, alongside the Badaling Expressway, ultimately to Baotou in Inner Mongolia.


Currently, the only expressway headed for Inner Mongolia is a still partially incomplete expressway heading west after the Jingzhang Expressway. China National Highway 110 is the only trunk road headed for Baotou.


The expressway would begin near Shibeifang in Beijing and cross the 6th Ring Road. How it will get out of Beijing is unclear; however, it must steer clear of the Ming Tombs.



edit  (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Roads_and_Expressways_of_Beijing&action=edit) Roads and Expressways of Beijing
(Beijing Road Network)
Main Roads: Chang'an Avenue (East, West) | Ping'an Avenue | Zhongzhou Road (North, South)
Ring Roads: Opened: 2nd Ring Road | 3rd Ring Road | 4th Ring Road | 5th Ring Road | 6th Ring Road

Partially under construction: 6th Ring Road
Projected: 7th Ring Road

Expressways: Opened: Badaling Expressway (Jingda Expressway) | Jingcheng Expressway | Airport Expressway | Jingtong Expressway | Jingha Expressway | Jingshen Expressway | Jingjintang Expressway (Jinghu Expressway) | Jingkai Expressway | Jingshi Expressway (Jingzhu Expressway)

Partially under construction: Jingcheng Expressway | Jingkai Expressway | Northern Airport Line | Jingping Expressway | Jingbao Expressway | Litian Expressway
Projected: 2nd Airport Expressway | Jingjin Expressway (North, South)
7 National Expressways: Jingtai Expressway (projected) | Jinghu Expressway | Jinggang'ao Expressway (partially complete) | Jingkun Expressway | Jingla Expressway (projected) | Jingwu Expressway (projected) | Jingha Expressway (alternate route)

China National Highways: G101 | G102 | G103 | G104 | G105 | G106 | G107 | G108 | G109 | G110 | G111
Related: Transportation of Beijing
Part of the WikiProject Transportation in China

  Results from FactBites:
 
Omnipelagos.com ~ article "Expressways of China" (1266 words)
Expressways in China are, thankfully, signposted in both Simplified Chinese and English (except for parts of the Jingshi Expressway, which relies fully on Chinese characters).
A few expressways use sensor systems, where one sensor is at the toll gate (at a special passageway) and the other is on the passing vehicle.
Expressway construction has also been one of the rare instances in which the Communist Party of China and the State Council has had to back down on a major policy initiative.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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