Motorways in North Macedonia

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The road sign informing the motorists they are travelling on an avtopat

The motorways in North Macedonia are called avtopat (North Macedonian: автопат, Albanian: autostradë) and the name, like its translation in most languages, simply means auto road.

North Macedonian Motorways map
A1/A2/A4 Interchange at Miladinovci, North Macedonia

The system has inherited some from the former Yugoslavia, although new sections have been completely built in the recent years. Pay-tolls (North Macedonian: patarini, Albanian: pagesë rrugore) remain in place and the speed limit is 130 km/h (81 mph).[1] The total length of the motorway network as of December 2020 is 317 km,[2] with extra 57 km being under construction. The works on the first couple kilometers of the motorway from Skopje to Kosovo's border started in 2020. The extension of the A2 motorway from Gostivar to Ohrid via Kicevo started also in 2022. There are further plans to extend the motorway from Trebenista to Kjafasan (Albanian: Qafa Thanë) making a motorway connection to the border with Albania.[3] Furthermore, most stretches of the existing network have been reconstructed, so overall the North Macedonian motorways are in decent shape[4]

The highways were originally marked with yellow-colour hard shoulder lines and some of these remain in place, they are however slowly being phased out and replaced with white. The motorway roadsigns maintain their green colour background, a feature shared with Switzerland, Italy, Denmark, Sweden, Greece, Czech Republic, Lithuania and the United States as well as the other former Yugoslav republics. The roads are on the whole straight with good surfacing, and better maintained than the national roads.

List of Motorways

Motorway Beginning Through End Length
M1-MKD.svg  North Macedonia Tabanovce,
 Serbia – Motorway-A1-Hex-Green.svg
Kumanovo, Skopje, M3-MKD.svg, M4-MKD.svg, Veles  North Macedonia Bogorodica, Gevgelija,
 Greece Evzonoi – Autokinetodromos A1 number.svg
173 km
M2-MKD.svg M1-MKD.svg Kriva Palanka  North Macedonia Deve Bair,
 Bulgaria Gyueshevo
73.574 km
M3-MKD.svg M1-MKD.svg Skopje/M4-MKD.svg  Kosovo Kaçanik 42.25 km
M4-MKD.svg M1-MKD.svg Tetovo, Gostivar,
Kičevo, Struga
 Albania Qafë Thanë 193.614 km
M5-MKD.svg M4-MKD.svg Ohrid, Bitola, Prilep,
Veles/ M1-MKD.svg, Štip
 Bulgaria Stanke Lisičkovo 308.268 km
M6-MKD.svg Štip/M5-MKD.svg Radoviš, Strumica  Bulgaria Zlatarevo 93.712 km
Total Motorways: 6 889.848 km

Note: Some of the highways are semi-highways (those with blue signs).

Motorway A1

A4 near Volkovo

The first motorway runs from the Tabanovce border crossing with Serbia (for Preševo), passing Kumanovo (A2 junction), Petrovec (Skopje Airport) near Skopje (A3 junction), Veles, Gradsko (A5 junction) Negotino (A7 junction), and continuing onto the main border crossing with Greece, Bogorodica-Evzoni near Gevgelija.

The large part of this express route was built whilst North Macedonia was a part of the SFR Yugoslavia, with the Kumanovo-Petrovec section first opened for traffic in 1979. The motorway was completed in 2004 in time for the 2004 Athens Olympics.

For approximately 30 km between Skopje Airport and Veles, the motorway splits, creating a gradual distance of several kilometres. The northbound route is the postulated motorway route whilst the slightly longer southbound route, with dangerous bends, is the old road and is being used as a freeway as it is only one-way. There are no plans at present to develop the northbound route into two separate carriageways thus perfecting the network.

The motorway A1 is part of European route E75.

Motorway A2

Miladinovci interchange from air

The A2 is a route that connects Kriva Palanka and the Deve Bair border crossing with Bulgaria with Ohrid. The route passes Skopje through the ring-road and enters the already constructed motorway that connects Tetovo with Gostivar. The part of the route that bypasses Kičevo and ends in Ohrid is planned to be turned into a motorway with 4 lanes by December 2023. Currently only the section from Miladinovci (interchange with A1) to Gostivar is a divided motorway, where the Tetovo-Gostivar section (25 km) is missing hard shoulders. The stretch of A2 from Skopje's Ring Road to Ohrid is part of the European corridor E65.

Motorway A3

A2 at Skopje Ring Road
Bridge on the D.Kapija-Smokvica stretch
Tunnels on A1

Currently, only a small section of the route A3 is a motorway (the one that goes along A4 from Štip to Kadrifakovo), while some sections are in the process of turning into express roads. The route traverses the country from east to west, between the border with Bulgaria near Delčevo, via Kočani, Štip (A4 junction), Veles (A1 junction), Prilep, Bitola, ending in Ohrid (A2 junction). Four lane express roads are being built in the stretches between Štip and Kočani as well as between Prilep and Gradsko. There are plans to build express roads with a possibility to upgrade them to motorways at the sections Bitola - Greece's border and Prilep - Bitola.

Motorway A4

The A4 connects Kosovo with Skopje and continues southeast towards Štip, Radoviš, and Strumica, eventually reaching the border with Bulgaria near Novo Selo. The 47 km stretch from Miladinovci to Štip was completed in late 2018, while the works on the Skopje - Blace (Kosovo border) section began in 2020. Further south-east from Štip to Radovis, there is an express road, which could potentially be upgraded to a motorway in the future.[5][6]

See also

References

  1. ^ Ministry of Internal Affairs Law for Public Transport p.29 (Mk) "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-01-23. Retrieved 2013-02-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ "ROAD NETWORK | Public enterprise for state roads".
  3. ^ "Most Modern Highway Will Take Travelers to Ohrid - Independent.mk". Archived from the original on 2017-05-10. Retrieved 2016-08-13.
  4. ^ "Macedonia: Prime Minister Dimitriev Expects Skopje-Stip Highway to be Fully Built in 2017 - Independent.mk". Archived from the original on 2017-05-10. Retrieved 2016-08-13.
  5. ^ "Mk:WikiProject Macedonia/Road network - OpenStreetMap Wiki". wiki.openstreetmap.org.
  6. ^ "Министерство за Транспорт и Врски" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-10-11. Retrieved 2019-03-30.