Swedish national road

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sweden's network of national roads in 2008, European routes here included
Number sign for national roads

National roads (Swedish: riksväg; literally: road of the rike/realm) in Sweden have road numbers from 1 through 99. The national roads are usually of high quality and sometimes pass through several counties. Roads with lower numbers are in southern Sweden, and roads with higher numbers are in northern Sweden. There are many cases where two or more routes in this system share the same physical road for a considerable distance, giving the country several kilometers of double-numbered road.

The network of national roads covers all of Sweden. In 2015, the total length of all national roads (excluding European routes) was 8,900 km (5,500 mi).[1] The only county that does not have a riksväg is Gotland County. The national roads are public roads owned by the Government of Sweden and administered by the Swedish Transport Administration. They get a high priority for snow plowing during the winter.

The roads' number signs are rectangular with a blue background, white numbers, and a white border.

Current Swedish national roads[]

As of 2017, Sweden has 57 national roads.

Number[2] Southern endpoint[2][3] Northern endpoint[2][3] Length (km) Length (mi)
Riksväg 9 Trelleborg Brösarp 140 87
Riksväg 11 Malmö Simrishamn 88 55
Riksväg 13 Ystad Ängelholm 131 81
Karlshamn Halmstad[4]
Landskrona 35 22
Ystad Broby 90 56
Åstorp Kristianstad 100 62
Rolsberga Linköping
Hässleholm Mellbystrand 73 45
Halmstad Kalmar 232 144
Halmstad Mora 560 350
(Karlskrona) Ronneby Gothenburg
Karlskrona 93 58
Karlshamn Tingsryd (Växjö) 35 22
Växjö Jönköping
Nybro Jönköping 174 108
Ekenässjön Mjölby 124 77
Ålem Motala
Gamleby Linköping 75 47
Växjö Oskarshamn
Riksväg 40 Gothenburg Västervik
Varberg Borås 83 52
Borås Trollhättan 86 53
Uddevalla Götene 110 68
Ulricehamn Skövde 64 40
Oskarshamn Grästorp (Trollhättan)
Lidköping Askersund
(Jönköping) Mjölby Söderhamn 468 291
Norrköping Örebro 110 68
Riksväg 52 Nyköping Kumla (Örebro) 130 81
Oxelösund Eskilstuna
Norrköping Uppsala 201 125
Norrköping Gävle
Katrineholm Järna 60 37
Karlstad Norwegian border (Eda) 109 68
Karlstad Norwegian border () 222 138
Karlstad Kopparberg 127 79
Västerås Norwegian border ()[5][6]
Riksväg 68 (Örebro) Lindesberg Gävle 230 140
Fagersta Rättvik[5][6]
Enköping Norwegian border () 419 260
Sala Uppsala 63 39
Riksväg 73 Nynäshamn Stockholm 51 32
Riksväg 75 Stockholm Nacka 9 5.6
Norrtälje Gävle 156 97
Knivsta Rösa (Norrtälje) 45 28
/ Ånge 216 134
Hudiksvall Norwegian border () 320 200
Sundsvall 78 48
Sollefteå Östersund 151 94
Utansjö/Mörtsal 229 142
Umeå Dorotea 178 111
(Luleå) Antnäs Arvidsjaur 135 84
Skellefteå Norwegian border () 350 220
Luleå Jokkmokk 168 104
Överkalix Övertorneå 50 31
Riksväg 99 Haparanda Karesuando 361 224

Swedish national roads that have changed designation over the years[]

The classic Swedish national roads[]

These are the Swedish national roads that existed before the large restructuring that happened when the European routes were implemented in 1962 in Sweden.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Sveriges vägnät". trafikverket.se (in Swedish). Swedish Transport Administration. Archived from the original on 2017-08-04. Retrieved 2018-12-04.
  2. ^ a b c Nationell vägdatabas (NVDB) [National road database] (Map) (in Swedish). Swedish Transport Administration. Retrieved 2017-11-04.
  3. ^ a b "Transportstyrelsens föreskrifter om vägvisningsplan för riksvägar och länsvägar i nummergruppen 100–499" (PDF). Transportstyrelsens författningssamling (in Swedish). Swedish Transport Agency. 2012. pp. 7–12. ISSN 2000-1975. TSFS 2012:73. Retrieved 2021-06-12.
  4. ^ a b Konsekvensutredning - Transportstyrelsens föreskrifter om vägvisningsplan för riksvägar och länsvägar i nummergruppen 0- 499 (PDF) (Report) (in Swedish). Swedish Transport Agency. 2012-04-04. pp. 2–3. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2017-10-30. Retrieved 2017-10-30.
  5. ^ a b c d "Vår nya Europaväg". Sveriges Radio (in Swedish). 2012-08-27. Retrieved 2017-10-29.
  6. ^ a b c d "Sammanställning 20 FS 2012:3 enligt 13 kap 1 § trafikförordningen (1998:1276) (TrF) över allmänna vägar och andra viktigare vägar i Dalarnas län" (PDF). Dalarnas läns författningssamling (in Swedish). County Administrative Board of Dalarna. April 2012. pp. 6–8. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2018-11-05. Retrieved 2017-10-29.
  7. ^ TT (1992-03-25). "Europavägar skyltas om". Dagens Nyheter (in Swedish). Retrieved 2017-11-04.
  8. ^ "Så får vägarna namn". Sveriges Radio (in Swedish). 2012-09-13. Retrieved 2017-10-30.
  9. ^ "Riksväg 45 blir Europaväg". Sveriges Radio (in Swedish). 2005-10-18. Retrieved 2017-11-03.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""