Autoroutes of France

From the AARoads Wiki: Read about the road before you go
(Redirected from A313 (France))
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Sign used denote the start of an Autoroute

Map of French autoroutes in 2012

The autoroute (French: [otoʁut] <phonos file="Fr-Paris--autoroute.ogg"></phonos>, highway or motorway) system in France consists largely of toll roads (76% of the total). It is a network of 11,882 km (7,383 mi) of motorways as of 2014. On road signs, autoroute destinations are shown in blue, while destinations reached through a combination of autoroutes are shown with an added autoroute logo. Toll autoroutes are signalled with the word péage (toll or toll plaza).

The French autoroute A1
A French motorway.

Length

Numbering scheme

Unlike other motorway systems, there is no systematic numbering system, but there is a clustering of Autoroute numbers based on region.

A1, A3, A4, A5, A6, A10, A13, A14, A15, A16 radiate clockwise from Paris, with A2, A11, and A12 branching from A1, A10, and A13, respectively. A7 begins in Lyon, where A6 ends. A8 and A9 begin from the A7.

The 20s are found in northern France. The 30s are found in eastern France. The 40s are found near the Alps. The 50s are in the southeast, near the French Riviera. The 60s are found in southern France. The 70s are found in the center of the country. The 80s are found in western France.

Named routes

Autoroutes are often given a name, even if these are not very used:

  • A1 is the autoroute du Nord (Northern motorway).
  • A4 is the autoroute de l'Est (Eastern motorway).
  • A6 and A7 are autoroutes du Soleil (Motorways of the Sun), as both lead from northern France to the sunny beach resorts of southern France.
  • A8 is named La provençale as it cross the geographical region of Provence.
  • A9 is named La Languedocienne as it crosses the geographic region of Languedoc and also La Catalane because it leads to the region Catalonia in Spain.
  • A10 is named L'Aquitaine because it leads to Bordeaux and the region Nouvelle-Aquitaine.
  • A11 is named L'Oceane because it leads to the Atlantic Ocean (Nantes).
  • A13 is named the autoroute de Normandie as it traverses the region Normandy.
  • A16 is named L'Européenne (the European) because it connects Paris with several European destinations such as the Belgium–France border, as well as Calais, which is connected with England.
  • A20 is named L'occitane as it leads to the region Occitanie in south-west France.
  • A21 is named the rocade minière (mining road) because it crosses the Nord-Pas de Calais Mining Basin, the largest mining stub in France.
  • A26 is named the autoroute des Anglais (motorway of the English) as it connects Calais, the main point of arrival for cars and lorries from the UK, before continuing to Troyes, and through the Champagne region, whose wines are loved by the British. In addition, it passes near the sites of the most famous battles fought by the British Army in World War I, such as Arras, Cambrai, and the Somme and not far from Ypres and Mons in Belgium. It also passes sites of earlier UK interest such as Crecy and The Field of the Cloth of Gold.
  • A35 is called l'Alsacienne or autoroute des Cigognes (Storks' motorways) as it passes only through the historical region of Alsace, for whom storks are a cultural symbol.
  • A36 is called la Comtoise after the old region Franche Comté.
  • A40 is named the autoroute blanche (white motorway) as it connects the French winter resort towns and the Alps.
  • The A61 and A62 are named autoroute des deux mers (the two seas motorway) because these roads connect the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea from Bordeaux via Toulouse to Narbonne.
  • A68 is called autoroute du Pastel because it leads to Albi and to the Lauragais where woad was cultivated to produce pastel.
  • A71 is called L'Arverne.
  • A75 is called La Méridienne.
  • A77 is called Autoroute de l'Arbre.
  • A84 is called Autoroute des Estuaires. It is part of the main route between Belgium and Spain, avoiding Paris.
  • A104, one of Paris's beltways, is also known as La Francilienne because it circles the region of Ile-de-France.

Administration

The status of motorways in France has been the subject of debate through years, from their construction until recently. Originally, the autoroutes were built by private companies mandated by the French government and followed strict construction rules as described below. They are operated and maintained by mixed companies held in part by private interests and in part by the state. Those companies hold concessions, which means that autoroutes belong to the French state and their administration to semi-private companies. Vinci controls around 4,380 km (2,720 mi) of motorway. The different companies are as follows:

Only in the Brittany region do most of the autoroutes belong to the government. They are operated by the regional council and are free from tolls.

Safety on French autoroutes

Motorway Speed Limits

France has the following speed limits for limited access roads classified as motorways:

  • Under normal conditions - 130 km/h (80 mph)
  • In rain or wet road conditions - 110 km/h (70 mph)
  • In heavy fog or snowy/icy conditions - 50 km/h (30 mph)

Limited access roads classified as express roads have lower speed limit (90 or 110 km/h, 55 or 70 mph).

In normal conditions, there is a minimum speed of 80 km/h (50 mph) in the leftmost lane. There is no minimum speed on the others lanes, however the speed must be adapted to the conditions and not constitute a hazard by being too slow.

Safe design

Dynamic information panel used on the French Autoroute.

The autoroutes are designed to increase driver safety and allow for higher speed limits (130 km/h or 80 mph) than on regular roads (80 km/h or 50 mph) without increasing the risk of accidents.

The safety features include:

  • one way driving: the lanes driving in the opposite direction are separated by at least a crash barrier designed to resist the oblique impact of a car at up to 180 km/h (110 mph); there are no intersecting roads but overpasses and underpasses;
  • wider carriageways, with at least 2 (often 3) lanes driving in the same direction, with a larger turning radius - some recently built autoroutes have one-lane-only sections; for privately operated motorways, in 2017, the proportion is 6800 km (74%) in 2x2 lanes, 2252 km (25%) in 2x3 lanes, 84 km (1%) in 2x4 lanes.[1] Each lane is 3.5m wide.[2]
  • long entrance and exit ramps or slip roads to get in or out of the autoroute without disturbing the traffic;
  • an emergency lane, where it is forbidden to drive (except for emergency services), to park (except in case of emergency) and to walk;[3] Since 2000, new emergency lanes on newly built motorways should be 2.5m wide (or 3m if there are more than 2000 trucks a day). According to the 2000 standard, the emergency lane must be included in a 10m wide (8.5m for sections limited to 110 km/h) security zone without obstacles (in case the security zone includes an upwards slope, it is limited to the line where the slope reaches a height of 3m).[2]
  • presence of emergency call boxes every 2 km (1.2 mi) on each side, that allow to call for help with the possibility to locate the call; some call boxes have flashing light that warn when there is a problem ahead;
Sign indicating a picnic place in an aire de repos.
  • rest areas (aire de repos, i.e. car park with public toilets) every 10 km (6.2 mi) (4–6 minutes of driving) and service areas (aire de service with a least a gas station) every 40 km (25 mi) (20–30 minutes of driving) - on most recently built autoroutes these distances may be longer, up to 30/60km;
  • regularly patrolling security services, to clear any obstacle and protect drivers in trouble (usually a breakdown or a flat tyre) with appropriate warning signs and beacons;
  • dynamic information panels that warn about possible difficulties ahead (e.g. accident, roadworks, traffic jam);
  • a radio station (107.7 MHz in FM) provides traffic information bulletins every 15 minutes (with a report in English in certain areas) and breaking news for emergencies;
  • on heavy traffic days (e.g. beginning and end of school holidays), specific information and recreation events may be organised in rest areas;
  • radars automatiques (speed cameras) are installed in many locations, and announced by a specific road sign.

Safety results

Fatalities on motorways have decreased between 2002 and 2016.

Fatalities accidents scenario

On French motorways, in 2016, 121 fatal accidents are direct/initial accidents representing 82% of fatal accidents, 16 (11%) fatal accidents occurs after a previous accident, and 10 (7%) fatal accidents occur after an incident.[4]

Three scenarios catch two-thirds of initial accidents:[4]

  • A01 simple collision of two vehicle without direction change
  • A06 crash on protection system such as safety traffic barrier
  • A05 loss of vehicle control

Fatalities and accidents remaining factors

Most of fatalities occur by night. Several factor of accidents are more highly probable by night in proportion to the traffic, although inattentiveness remains risky during the day.

Young drivers

Young drivers between 18 and 34 years old represent 19% of motorway drivers, but they are overrepresented in fatal motor vehicle collisions[5] and are involved in more than half of fatal accidents.[5]

Pedestrians

Although pedestrians are forbidden on motorways in conformity with the Vienna Convention, they are still sometimes killed on motorways.

In case a vehicle on a carriage cannot move, motorways safety rules remains applicable: it is forbidden for a pedestrian to travel on the motorway by article 421-2 from the "Code de la route" law.[6] For this reason, in case of accident or breakdown, it is advised to turn on hazard warning lights, wear high-visibility clothing, and go in a safer place such as the other side from the traffic barrier where there is no traffic. Since 2008, it is clarified that warning triangles are no longer mandatory when they would endanger the driver of the disabled vehicle.[7]

Economics

Barrière de péage
Toll barrier in Hordain (north of France), on autoroute A2

The toll roads were granted as concessions to mixed-economy corporations; the free roads are directly administered by the national government. Tolls are either based on a flat-rate for access to the road or on the distance driven. The latter case is the most common for long distances; users take a ticket from an automatic machine when they enter the autoroute, and pay according to the distance when exiting; toll booths accept multiple payment methods.

Sign indicating a péage.

In 2005, the Villepin government proposed a controversial plan to sell all of the state's holdings in autoroute companies to private investors. Critics contend that the price announced is well below the profit forecasts for these companies, and thus that the government sacrifices the future to solve current budgetary problems.[8]

List of Autoroutes

Number Length (km) Length (mi) Southern or western terminus Northern or eastern terminus Route name Formed Removed Notes
A 1 211 131 Paris (Porte de la Chapelle) Lille Autoroute du Nord 01954-01-011954 current Part of E 15 / E 17 / E 19 / E 42
A 2 77.6 48.2 Combles Belgium 01972-01-011972 current Part of E 19
A 3 18.4 11.4 Paris (Porte de Bagnolet) Gonesse 01969-01-011969 current Part of E 15
A 4 467 290 Paris (Porte de Bercy) Strasbourg Autoroute de l'Est 01970-01-011970 current Part of E 25 / E 50
A 5 225 140 Vert-Saint-Denis (Seine-et-Marne) Langres 01983-01-011983 current Part of E 17 / E 54 / E 511
A 6 466.3 289.7 Lyon Paris Autoroute du Soleil 01960-01-011960 current Part of E 15 / E 21 / E 60 / E 70
A 7 312 194 Marseille Lyon Autoroute du Soleil 01951-01-011951 current Part of E 15 / E 80 / E 714
A 8 224 139 La Fare-les-Oliviers Italy La Provençale 01961-01-011961 current Part of E 74 / E 80
A 9 280 170 Spain Orange La Languedocienne, La Catalane 01960-01-011960 current Part of E 15 / E 80
A 10 557 346 Bordeaux Rungis L'Aquitaine 01960-01-011960 current Part of E 5 / E 60 / E 606
A 11 347 216 Nantes Ponthévrard L'Océane 01966-01-011966 current Part of E 50 / E 60 / E 501
A 12 8.5 5.3 Trappes Rocquencourt 01950-01-011950 current
A 13 226 140 Caen (Porte de Paris) Paris (Porte d'Auteuil) Autoroute de Normandie 01940-01-011940 current Part of E 5 / E 46 / E 402
A 14 21.7 13.5 La Défense Orgeval 01996-01-011996 current
A 15 24 15 Gennevilliers Cergy 01974-01-011974 current
A 16 319 198 L'Isle-Adam Belgium L'Européenne 01991-01-011991 current Part of E 15 / E 40 / E 44 / E 401 / E 402
A 19 131 81 Orléans (A10 at Artenay) Sens L'Éco Autoroute 01993-01-011993 current Part of E 60 / E 511
A 20 428 266 Montauban Vierzon L'Occitane 01992-01-011992 current Part of E 9
A 21 58.9 36.6 Aix-Noulette Douchy-les-Mines Rocade Minière 01971-01-011971 current
A 22 15.8 9.8 Villeneuve-d'Ascq Belgium Autoroute du Nord 01972-01-011972 current Part of E 17 / E 44
A 23 42.7 26.5 Lesquin Trith-Saint-Léger 01978-01-011978 current
A 24 Amiens Belgium 01980-01-011980 02011-01-012011 Proposed, but never built
A 25 62.7 39.0 Lesquin Dunkirk 01963-01-011963 current Part of E 42
A 26 395 245 Troyes Calais Autoroute des Anglais 01976-01-011976 current Part of E 15 / E 17 / E 50
A 27 13.7 8.5 Lesquin Belgium 01973-01-011973 current Part of E 42
A 28 366.5 227.7 Abbeville Tours Autoroute des Estuaires 02005-01-012005 current Part of E 44 / E 402 / E 502
A 29 183 114 Le Havre Saint-Quentin 01995-01-011995 current Part of E 44 / E 402
A 30 Uckange Crusnes Part of E 411
A 31 Beaune Luxembourg Part of E 21 / E 23 / E 25 / E 54 / E 60 / E 411
A 33 Nancy Hudiviller Part of E 23
A 34 Reims Belgium Part of E 44 / E 46 / E 402
A 35 Lauterbourg Switzerland (Basel) Part of E 25 / E 60
A 36 Ladoix-Serrigny Germany La Comtoise Part of E 54 / E 60
A 38 Pouilly-en-Auxois Dijon
A 39 Dijon Bourg-en-Bresse Autoroute Verte
A 40 Mâcon Mont Blanc Tunnel Autoroute Blanche, Autoroute des Titans Part of E 25 / E 62
A 41 Switzerland(Geneva) Grenoble Part of E 21 / E 25 / E 62 / E 712
A 42 Lyon Bourg-en-Bresse Part of E 611
A 43 Lyon Italy Part of E 70 / E 711
A 44 Bypassing Lyon to the west proposed
A 45 Lyon Saint-Étienne proposed
A 46 Anse Givors (bypassing Lyon by east) Part of E 15 / E 70
A 47 Lyon Saint-Étienne
A 48 Lyon Grenoble Part of E 711 / E 713
A 49 Grenoble Valence Part of E 713
A 50 Marseille Toulon
A 51 Marseille Grenoble, Val de Durance Middle section not built. Part of E 712
A 52 A8 A50 Great ring of Marseilles
A 54 Nîmes Salon Sud (link with A7) Part of E 80
A 55 Martigues Marseille
A 56 Link between A54 and A55 from Salon to Fos freight port proposed  
A 57 Toulon Vidauban, link with A8
A 61 Toulouse Narbonne Autoroute des Deux Mers Part of E 9 / E 80
A 62 Bordeaux Toulouse Autoroute des Deux Mers Part of E 72
A 63 Bordeaux Spain Autoroute de la Côte Basque Part of E 5 / E 70 / E 80
A 64 Toulouse Bayonne La Pyrénéenne Part of E 80
A 65 Bordeaux Pau Part of E 7
A 66 Toulouse Pamiers Part of E 9
A 68 Toulouse Albi
A 71 Orléans (A10) Clermont-Ferrand (A75) L'Arverne Part of E 11
A 72 Saint-Étienne Clermont-Ferrand
A 75 Clermont-Ferrand Béziers (A9) La Méridienne Part of E 11
A 77 Poligny (A6) Challuy Autoroute de l'Arbre
A 79 Montmarault (A71) Digoin Part of E 62
A 81 94.8 58.9 Le Mans Le Gravelle 01982-01-011982 current Part of E 50
A 82 Nantes Brest Almost all the route is still N165 expressway. Part of E 60
A 83 152.5 94.8 Nantes Niort 02001-01-012001 current Part of E 03
A 84 170.5 105.9 Caen (Porte de Bretagne) Rennes Autoroute des Estuaires 02003-01-012003 current Part of E 3 / E 401
A 85 270 170 Angers Vierzon 01997-01-011997 current Part of E 60 / E 607
A 86 80.1 49.8 Paris orbital 02009-01-012009 current
A 87 129 80 Angers La Roche-sur-Yon 02002-01-012002 current
A 88 117.7 73.1 Caen (Porte d'Espagne) Sees 02010-01-012010 current
A 89 544 338 Lyon Bordeaux 01991-01-011991 current Part of E 70
A 103 A3
A 104 Francilienne The Francilienne around the Île-de-France (Paris) region
A 105 Combs-la-Ville Melun
A 106 A6 Orly Airport
A 110 Ablis Tours proposed
A 115 A15 (Sannois) Méry-sur-Oise
A 126 A6 A10 short connector
A 131 Bourneville (A13 exit 26) Le Havre Part of E 05
A 132 A13 / Pont-L'Évêque Canapville
A 139 A13 Rouen
A 140 A4 Meaux
A 150 Rouen Yvetot
A 151 Rouen Tôtes
A 154 A13 Louviers
A 170 Mitry-Mory Gonesse Still signed as a section of A104
A 199 Torcy Champs-sur-Marne Downgraded into RD 199
A 203 Charleville-Mézières Glaire now part of A34
A 211 A21 N17
A 216 A16/A26 N216 Calais
A 260 Boulogne-sur-Mer A26 proposed
A 304 A34 Belgium Part of E 44 / E 420
A 311 A31 Dijon
A 313 A31 Pont-à-Mousson
A 314 A4 Metz
A 315 A4 Metz
A 320 A4 Germany Part of E 50
A 330 Nancy Richardménil Part of E 23
A 344 Former A4 through Reims Traversée urbaine de Reims
A 352 A35 Molsheim
A 355 Strasbourg bypass Contournement Ouest de Strasbourg Part of E 25
A 391 A39 RN83
A 404 Saint-Martin-du-Frêne Arbent
A 406 contournement Sud de Mâcon Part of E 62
A 410 A40 A40 Part of E 712
A 411 A40 Switzerland Part of E 712
A 430 Chamousset Gilly-sur-Isère
A 432 Saint-Laurent-de-Mure Montluel Part of E 70
A 450 A7 Brignais Formerly A45
A 466 A6 A46 Part of E 70
A 480 western bypass of Grenoble Rocade Ouest de Grenoble
A 500 A8 Monaco
A 501 A50 A52
A 502 A50 Aubange
A 507 Ring of Marseilles  
A 515 A51 Bouc-Bel-Air
A 517 A7 A51 (France)
A 520 A52 Auriol
A 551 A7 A55
A 552 A7 A55
A 557 One-direction ring of Marseilles downtown
A 570 A57 Hyères
A 620 A61 A62 West ring of Toulouse. Part of E 9 / E 72 / E 80
A 621 Toulouse Blagnac
A 623 A620 A61
A 624 Toulouse Colomiers
A 630 Lormont Bègles Part of E 05 / E 70 / E 72 / E 606
A 641 Oeyregave Orthevielle
A 645 Ponlat-Taillebourg Seilhan
A 660 Mios Gujan-Mestras
A 680 Castelmaurou Verfeil
A 701 A10 Orléans
A 709 former A9 south of Montpellier Contournement Sud de Montpellier
A 710 Gerzat Clermont-Ferrand
A 711 Lempdes Pont-du-Château
A 712 Lempdes Pont-du-Château
A 714 Bizeneuille Saint-Victor Part of E 62
A 719 Gannat Monteignet-sur-l'Andelot
A 750 A75 Clermont-l'Hérault - Montpellier
A 811 Carquefou Sainte-Luce-sur-Loire
A 813 Banneville-la-Campagne Frénouville


A 837 Rochefort Écurat (A10) Autoroute des Oiseaux Part of E 602
A 844 A11 A82 Part of Nantes ring road and E 60
A 1 La Martiniquaise Around Fort-de-France. Autoroute in Martinique, a French overseas region.
  •       Former
  •       Proposed and unbuilt

Radio coverage

The complete coverage map of FM 107.7.

The FM 107.7 radio coverage is available in 2017 on 8902 kilometres of the (ASFA) network.[9] This is a list of highways that are updated in 107.7 FM every 15 minutes, live 24/7 (if the highway is said alone, it means that the station covers all around it):

Sanef 107.7 (1850km)

Nord
  • A1: Roissy-en-France - Carvin
  • A2: A1 - Hordain
  • A16: L'Isle-d'Adam - Boulogne-sur-Mer
  • A26: Calais - Saint-Quentin
  • A29: Neufchâtel-en-Bray - Saint-Quentin
Est
Ouest
  • A13: Orgeval - Caen
  • A14: Carrières-sur-Seine - Orgeval
  • A29: (Beuzeville - Saint-Saëns; outside Normandy)
  • A132
  • A139
  • A154
  • A813

Autoroute INFO (2487km)

Centre-Est (live from Dijon)
  • A5: Lieusant - Langres
  • A6: Fleury-en-Bière - Limonest
  • A19: Courtenay - Sens
  • A26: northern Troyes - southern Troyes
  • A31: Beaune - Toul
  • A36: Beaune - Mulhouse
  • A39: Dijon - Bourg-en-Bresse
  • A40: Mâcon - Bellegarde
  • A46: Anse - Vaulx-en-Velin
  • A71: Bourges - Clermont-Ferrand
  • A77: A6 - Cosne-Cours-sur-Loire
  • A105
  • A311
  • A391
  • A406
  • A411
  • A430
  • A714
Rhône-Alpes (live from Chambéry)
  • A40: Bellegarde - Le Fayet
  • A41: Genève - Chambéry - Grenoble
  • A42: Bourg-en-Bresse - Vaulx-en-Velin
  • A43: Saint-Priest - Chambéry - Tunnel du Fréjus
  • A48: Bourgoin-Jallieu - Saint-Égrève
  • A49
  • A51: Le Pont de Claix - Col du Fau

Environment

99% of the privately managed network is protected by natural fencing.[9]

Privately managed motorways have 1764 wildlife crossing structures.[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named ASFA-cles17
  2. ^ a b ICTAAL INSTRUCTION SUR LES CONDITIONS TECHNIQUES D’AMÉNAGEMENT DES AUTOROUTES DE LIAISON (PDF) (Report) (in French). Sétra - Service d'études sur les transports, les routes et leurs aménagements. 12 December 2000 – via DTRF - Documentation des Techniques Routières Françaises.
  3. ^ by definition motorways are forbidden to pedestrians
  4. ^ a b Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named accidents-mortels-2016
  5. ^ a b Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named ASFA-clés-mortels-2016
  6. ^ Code de la route : Chapitre Ier : Autoroutes. (Articles R421-1 à R421-10), retrieved 6 August 2022, I.-L'accès des autoroutes est interdit à la circulation :
  7. ^ "Gilet et triangle de sécurité". Ministère de l'Économie des Finances et de la Souveraineté industrielle et numérique (in French). 23 October 2020.
  8. ^ Press release of 12-14-2005 Archived November 20, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ a b c Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named autoroutes.fr

External links

Media related to Autoroutes of France at Wikimedia Commons