List of motorways in Belgium

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Motorways in Belgium

In

motorways (Dutch: autosnelwegen; French: autoroutes; German: Autobahnen) are indicated by an A and an E (for European) number. The E numbers are used most often. Roads that are (part of) a ring road around a town or city
are mostly indicated by an R number.

Since 1989, all highways are built and maintained by the governments of the three

regions
(Flanders, Wallonia and Brussels).

For safety on motorways in Belgium,

A1 - A12 (Radial Motorways)

This first list concerns the motorways that start from the ring of Brussels to other cities and are clockwise: A1 towards the north, A2 towards the north-east, A3 towards the east, etc.

The motorways A5, A6 and A9 have never been built.

A11 - A54 (Secondary Motorways)

A27 near to St. Vith

A112 - A604 (Local Motorways)

Aborted projects

Ring roads (R)

Main

Secondary

Antwerp

Brabant

Former

Brussels-Capital Region
nowadays.

  • R20 -
    Small ring of Brussels
  • R21 - Intermediate Ring of Brussels
  • R22 - Greater ring or second ring of Brussels
  • R23 - Leuven
  • R24 - Nivelles
  • R25 - Aarschot
  • R26 - Diest
  • R27 - Tienen

West Flanders

East Flanders

Hainaut

Liège

Limburg

Link roads (B)

Prefixed by the letter B from the French word "bretelle".

Antwerp

Brabant

Former

Brussels-Capital Region
nowadays.

  • B201: R0 -
    Érasme/Erasmus
  • B202: R0 - Avenue de l'Humanité/Humaniteitslaan
  • B202a: R202 - N266

East Flanders

Hainaut

  • B505: A7/E19/E42 - R50 (Mons)

Liège

  • B601: A27/E42 - N640 (Tiège, Jalhay)
  • B602: A26/E25 - N633 (Tilff, Esneux)

Namur

  • B901: A4/E411 - N90 (Loyers,
    Namur
    )

See also

References

  1. ^ "Autoroute: un tiers des accidents mortels aux alentours d'une bretelle (2) - newmobility.news". newmobility.news. Archived from the original on 2020-01-28.

External links