T3 Road (Zambia)

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T3 trunk
Route of the T3 through the Copperbelt
Route information
Length263 km (163 mi)
Major junctions
South endT2 near Kapiri Mposhi
 M6 south of Ndola
M4 in Ndola
M6 near Luanshya
M18 in Kitwe
M16 near Chambishi
M4 near Chambishi
T5 in Chingola
North endKasumbalesa border with DR Congo
Location
Major citiesNdola, Kitwe, Chingola
Highway system
Transport in Zambia

The T3 is a Trunk Road in Zambia. The road runs from Kapiri Mposhi via Ndola, Kitwe and Chingola to Kasumbalesa on the border with DR Congo.[1]

In Kapiri Mposhi, the T3 connects to the T2 Road to Lusaka, making it part of the main link between Zambia's Capital City and DR Congo.

The T3 is the main route through the Copperbelt Province, passing through 4 and bypassing 1 of the 10 main towns in the province. It is also the main linkage between Kapiri Mposhi and towns of the North-Western Province of Zambia, particularly Solwezi and Kasempa.

The T3 is entirely part of the Trans-African Highway network 9 or Beira-Lobito Highway, which connects Beira in Mozambique with Lobito in Angola. The T3 is also part of the main link between Lusaka, Zambia's capital city, and DR Congo. The T3 is part of the main connection between DR Congo and countries like Malawi, Namibia, Botswana and South Africa. As a result, the roads that make up the T3 are usually very busy in either direction (mostly with trucks).

Route[]

The T3 Road starts north of Kapiri Mposhi, Central Province, at a t-junction with the T2 Road (Tanzam Highway; Cairo-Cape Town Highway; Zambia's Great North Road), going northwards. After the first 10 kilometres, the road crosses into the Copperbelt Province.

From the T2 junction, the T3 Road travels for 110 km, through Masaiti District (one lane in each direction; passing through the Kafulafuta Toll Plaza just before the M6 Road junction),[2] to the city of Ndola (Capital of the Copperbelt), famously known as The Friendly City. As Kabwe Road, it enters Ndola in a northwesterly direction, bypassing the industrial area of Bwana Mkubwa. At the roundabout after Jacaranda Mall, the T3 continues by way of following the road to the left. The road goes in a north-northwesterly direction as Nkana Road, crossing the Kafubu River, being the road separating the Ndola Central and Kanini suburbs. At the roundabout by the Ndola Teaching Hospital, the T3 continues westwards by way of a left turn onto Luanshya Road.

A sign on the T3 Road depicting Ndola as The Friendly City

By Levy Mwanawasa Stadium at a roundabout, the T3 meets the Ndola-Mufulira Road (designated as the M4 Road), which is the road that connects to the Congo Pedicle (The Area of DR Congo separating the Copperbelt Province and Luapula Province of Zambia). Many motorists coming from Southern Zambia prefer to use this route through Ndola, Mufulira and the Congo Pedicle road to reach Mansa, Luapula instead of the longer route going east of Kapiri Mposhi, due to this route requiring less time.

At the Levy Mwanawasa Stadium roundabout, the T3 becomes the Ndola-Kitwe Dual Carriageway, which is the freeway between Ndola and Kitwe (2 lanes in each direction). As a v-shaped carriageway, the dual carriageway begins by first going west-south-west for 17 kilometres, through the Michael Chilufya Sata Toll Plaza,[2] to the Luanshya Turn-Off north of Fisenge, where there is a road southwards that provides access to the town of Luanshya (8 km away). Before the Michael Chilufya Sata Toll Plaza, the carriageway meets a road which provides access to the new Copperbelt International Airport next to the Dag Hammarskjöld Crash Site Memorial. At the Luanshya Turn, the dual carriageway turns to the north-west and goes for 37 km to the city centre of Kitwe, a commercial city.

The road enters Kitwe City Centre as President Avenue, beginning by crossing the Kafue River, passing the Luangwa and Wusakili suburbs and bypassing the Nkana Mine. After being the road separating the Nkana East and Nkana West suburbs, the T3 continues by way of a left turn onto Oxford Road and a right turn onto Independence Avenue.

At the Kanyanta Road roundabout in the city centre, the T3 meets the eastern terminus of the M18 Road, which is the route that connects with Kalulushi, Lufwanyama and Kasempa in the west. It is the 1st route with access to the North-Western Province.

As Independence Avenue, it is the road connecting Kitwe Central with the northern suburbs of the city. From Kitwe Central Hospital, the T3 travels north-west for 50 km to the mining city of Chingola as the Kitwe-Chingola Dual Carriageway (2 lanes in each direction), passing through the mining town of Chambishi (part of Kalulushi District). At Sabina, 15 kilometres from Kitwe City Centre (10 kilometres before Chambishi), the T3 Road meets the northern terminus of the M16 Road (which is coming from Kalulushi) before meeting another road connecting to Mufulira and the Congo Pedicle road in the northeast, named Kitwe Road and designated as the M4 Road again. Just before Sabina is the Wilson Mofya Chakulya Toll Plaza.[2]

At the Independence Avenue roundabout south of Chingola Central, the T3 continues by way of a left turn. it goes northwest, separating the south-western part of Chingola from the central and eastern areas. North-west of Chingola Central, by the Chingola River, the T3 Road meets the eastern terminus of the T5 Road, which connects the Copperbelt with Solwezi and Mwinilunga in the North-Western Province & with a border into Angola just after Mwinilunga.

From the T5 junction in Chingola, the T3 goes north for 17 km, bypassing Nchanga Mines and crossing the Kafue River one more time, to the small town of Chililabombwe. It goes for a further 17Km, bypassing Konkola Copper Mines In Konkola, to end at the Kasumbalesa border with DR Congo. The Road becomes the N1 route of DR Congo and proceeds to Lubumbashi (100 kilometres away) in the north-west. The border town on the DR Congo side is also named Kasumbalesa.

Road Network[]

The T3 is entirely part of the Trans-African Highway network no. 9 or Beira-Lobito Highway, which connects Beira in Mozambique with Lobito in Angola. The T3 is also part of the Walvis Bay-Ndola-Lubumbashi Development Road between DR Congo and Namibia.

The T3 is part of the connection between DR Congo and countries in the south and south-east, like Malawi, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Mozambique and South Africa. As a result, it is an important trade route and is commonly used by cars and trucks in either direction.

M6 Road (Copperbelt)[]

The M6 Road is an alternative route, bypassing the City of Ndola and providing a shorter, more direct route to both Kitwe and Luanshya. The entire route is 33 km in length. It starts at a junction with the T3 Road 34 kilometres south of Ndola by the Masangano Market of Masaiti District, going north-west and rejoins the T3 just north of the small area of Fisenge in Luanshya District (8 km north of Luanshya), at the point where the T3 turns to the direction of Kitwe.[1]

This route is used by people who wish to skip the City of Ndola and who wish to avoid the Michael Chilufya Sata Toll Plaza west of Ndola at the point where the T3 enters Luanshya District.[citation needed] So, people travelling from Kapiri Mposhi only have to pass through one toll gate, the Kafulafuta Toll Plaza just south of Masangano Market, before joining this road on the route to Kitwe.

13 kilometers from Masangano Market, the M6 meets a road which goes north into the Mushili township of Ndola. 5 kilometers before Fisenge, the M6 meets a road which goes west into the Luanshya Town Centre.

The bypass, called the Fisenge Bypass on some maps, reduces the distance to Kitwe by 22 kilometres but the state of the road means that very little time is saved (only 20 minutes; estimated by Google Maps as of 2021). Most trucks and motor vehicles still pass through Ndola during their trips in either direction between Kapiri Mposhi (& Lusaka) in the south and Kitwe (& the Democratic Republic of the Congo) in the north-west.[citation needed]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b "Roads and Road Traffic (Amendment) Act, Cap 464 | Zambia Legal Information Institute". zambialii.org. Retrieved 2019-07-03.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c "NRFA". Retrieved 2021-07-03.
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