European route E90

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E90 shield
E90
Major junctions
West endLisbon, Portugal
East endSilopi, Turkey
Location
Countries Portugal
 Spain
 Italy
 Greece
 Turkey
Highway system
  • International E-road network
  • A Class
  • B Class

European route E 90 is an A-Class West–East European route, extending from Lisbon in Portugal in the west to the TurkishIraqi border in the east.

Lisbon, Madrid, Barcelona, Mazara del Vallo, Palermo, Messina, Reggio Calabria, Catanzaro, Metaponto, Taranto, Brindisi, Igoumenitsa, Ioannina, Thessaloniki, Alexandroupoli, Gelibolu, Bursa, Ankara, Adana, Nusaybin, and Khabur

Itinerary[]

The E 90 routes through five European countries, and includes four sea-crossings: Barcelona, Spain - Mazara del Vallo, Italy; Messina, Italy to Reggio Calabria, Italy; Brindisi, Italy, to Igoumenitsa, Greece, and Eceabat, Turkey, to Çanakkale, Turkey.

 Portugal

The 25 de Abril Bridge connecting Almada to Lisbon, Portugal
  • A2 / : Lisbon - Setúbal (Start of concurrency with E01) - (End of concurrency with E01)
  • A6 / : ( E01) - Évora (Start of concurrency with IP2-PT.svg E802) - Estremoz (End of concurrency with IP2-PT.svg E802) - Elvas

 Spain

The E90 near Zaragoza, Spain

Gap

  •  Spain Barcelona -  Italy Mazara del Vallo

 Italy

The E90 near Torregrotta, Italy
  • A29: Mazara del Vallo ( E931) - Alcamo ( E933) - Palermo (Towards E25)
  • A20: Palermo (Towards E25) - Campofelice di Roccella
  • A19: Campofelice di Roccella - Messina ( E45)
  • Ferry Sign.svg: Messina - Villa San Giovanni
  • A2: Villa San Giovanni ( E45) - Reggio Calabria
  • : Reggio Calabria
  • SS 106: Reggio Calabria - Catanzaro ( E848) - Crotone ( E846) - Sibari ( E848) - Metaponto ( E847) - Taranto ( E843)
  • SS 7: Taranto ( E843) - Brindisi ( E55)
  • SS 16 / SS 613: Brindisi ( E55)

Ferry

  • Ferry Sign.svg  Italy Brindisi -  Greece Igoumenitsa

 Greece

The E90 near Veria, Greece

The Greek portion of E90 is known as Egnatia Odos, after the road built on top of a pre-Roman trail that spanned from the Adriatic to the Aegean, Via Egnatia. It was later extended to Byzantium (Constantinople) to the east and Rome to the west. The name Egnatia comes from the Roman proconsul, Gnaius Egnatius, who built the original road.[1] In its design phase, Egnatia Odos was planned to have 1650 bridges, 43 river crossings, 11 railway crosses, and 50 interchanges with existing roads.

 Turkey

 Iraq

  • 5 M / Highway 2: Zakho

References[]

  1. ^ Jog, Gauri M.; Brilakis, Ioannis K.; Angelides, Demos C. (2011-07-01). "Testing in harsh conditions: Tracking resources on construction sites with machine vision". Automation in Construction. 20 (4): 328–337. doi:10.1016/j.autcon.2010.11.003. ISSN 0926-5805.

External links[]

Coordinates: 37°58′51″N 13°40′09″E / 37.98083°N 13.66917°E / 37.98083; 13.66917

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