A6 (Poland)

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Autostrada A6

Route information
Part of E 28
Length29.2 km (18.1 mi)
Major junctions
FromBundesautobahn 11 number.svg Bundesautobahn 11 at border with Germany at PomellenKołbaskowo
Major intersectionsS3-PL.svg S3 express road
S10-PL.svg S10 express road (planned)
Location
CountryPoland
Major citiesSzczecin
Highway system
A 4 A 8

The autostrada A6 in Poland is a short motorway that starts at the Polish/German border at Kołbaskowo/Pomellen connecting to the German A11 autobahn. It forms a southern bypass of the Szczecin metropolitan area and terminates at Rzęśnica interchange to the east of the city, from where it continues in an expressway standard as S3 towards Świnoujście and S6 towards Gdańsk. Its length is 29.2 km (18.1 mi). The motorway is part of the European route E28.

History

The 1930s (construction)

The motorway had its beginning as part of the Reichsautobahn system built by Germany in the 1930s, as part of a planned motorway connection from Berlin through the "Polish Corridor" to Königsberg in East Prussia (now Kaliningrad, Russia). Construction works proceeded up to Rummelsburg (Miastko) after the 1939 Invasion of Poland but finally discontinued in 1942 because of the impact of World War II. After the war, the highway sections that, together with the surrounding area, became a part of Poland were dubbed Berlinka. The post-1945 borders meant that the need for a high-capacity road connection on that route disappeared. Even though much of the construction work had already been completed, it was not continued by the postwar Polish government.

Of the portion that ended up on Polish territory, only a 29.2 km (18.1 mi) stretch east from the Oder-Neisse line border with Germany was fully completed as a dual-carriageway autobahn (in 1936-1937), which became the A6 of today. Further east, for another 30 km (19 mi), one finds a partially completed, single-lane motorway, signed as voivodeship road 142 (part of it has been reconstructed to also serve as an emergency military road airstrip). Further east, the road is no longer passable, but the earthworks left from the motorway construction stretch for about 100 km (62 mi) more and are easily visible on satellite photographs. While not part of the A6 in any formal sense, another part of the Berlin-Königsberg autobahn was the single carriageway section east of Elbląg (Elbing), built in prewar East Prussia and now in Poland and Russia. That stretch had been rebuilt and was opened to traffic in 2008 as express road S22.

1996 to 2022 (reconstruction)

In the years after the war, the damage caused by wartime demolitions was repaired but not completely, as some Oder bridges were rebuilt only as a single carriageway. The motorway saw no more significant upgrade or reconstruction until the 1990s. As a result, it fell far short of modern standards and so on some maps, it was not marked as a motorway in whole or in part. Work on upgrading the highway to modern standards began in 1996, starting with the full rebuilding of Oder bridges. The first 22 km from the German border to the junction with national road 10 have been reconstructed from 1996 to 1999 and from 2005 to 2007. The eastern 6.5 km were reconstructed and then officially redesignated as A6 in 2012 to 2014 and 2017 to 2020.[1] Interchange Kijewo was reconstructed from 2019 to 2022, which finished the process of resurfacing the whole length of A6.[2]

Exit list

CountryVoivodeshipLocationkmmiExitNameDestinationsNotes
PolandWest Pomeranian VoivodeshipGmina Kołbaskowo00.0Kołbaskowo / Pomellen former border crossing A 11 / E 28BerlinSouthwestern endpoint of motorway, route continues as German motorway A 11 towards Berlin

Kilometrage starting point


Border crossing is no longer operational since 21 December 2007, due to Poland signing Schengen Agreement


Western terminus of E28 overlap
Kołbaskowo2.71.7Szczecin Zachód DK 13Szczecin / RosówekFilling station in direction towards Szczecin
Junction will be closed in the future
Kołbaskowo3.82.4Kołbaskowo Południe S 6 – Szczecin, Police, Goleniów (planned western bypass of Szczecin)
DK 13Szczecin / Rosówek
Proposed interchange, will replace Szczecin Zachód junction
Gmina Kołbaskowo6.13.8BridgeBridge over West Oder
Szczecin8.45.2BridgeBridge over East Oder (Regalica)
9.35.8Radziszewo DK 31 – Szczecin / Kostrzyn nad OdrąSpeed limit to 90 kph
• No acceleration lanes
• No decceleration lanes
116.8Klucz interchange S 3 / E 65Gorzów Wielkopolski, PoznańSouthwestern terminus of S3 and E65 overlap
Semi-directional T interchange
15.59.6Szczecin Podjuchylocal road – Szczecin-PodjuchyPodjuchy is a municipal neighbourhood of Szczecin
Access to Morwowa Street
18.311.4Viaduct in KlęskowoThe longest bridge on the motorway; 242 meters (0.150 mi) in length
21.513.4Szczecin Kijewo interchange DK 10 – Szczecin-Centrum, Lubieszyn / Bydgoszcz, PyrzyceCloverleaf interchange with collector-distributor roads;

Centrum means center


Former northeast terminus
23.514.6ViaductViaduct over Szczecin–Poznań railway
24.415.2Szczecin Dąbielocal road – Szczecin-Dąbie, WielgowoDąbie and Wielgowo are municipal neighbourhoods of Szczecin
Gmina Goleniów28.217.5 S 3 / E 65Goleniów, Świnoujście
S 6 / E 28 – Goleniów, Gdańsk
• Northeastern terminus of the motorway, according to signage
• Northeastern terminus of E28 overlap
Road continues as common section of expressways S3 (E65) and S6 (E28) with kilometrage of S3
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
  •       Concurrency terminus
  •       Proposed
  •       Route transition

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ "Przed długim weekendem uruchamiamy dwie jezdnie na S3 i A6 od Szczecina do Goleniowa".
  2. ^ https://www.gov.pl/web/gddkia-szczecin/wezel-szczecin-kijewo-w-pelni-otwarty