Expressway S6 (Poland)
Expressway S6 | |
---|---|
Droga ekspresowa S6 | |
Route information | |
Part of E28 | |
Length: |
66.5 km (41.3 mi) 330 km (205 mi) planned |
Major junctions | |
From: | A6 near Szczecin-Goleniów "Solidarność" Airport |
S7 near Gdańsk (under construction) | |
To: | A1 south of Gdańsk |
Location | |
Major cities: | Szczecin, Gdynia, Gdańsk |
Highway system | |
National roads in Poland |
Expressway S6 (in Polish droga ekspresowa S6) is a major road in Poland which has been planned to run from the A6 autostrada in Szczecin, though Goleniów in West Pomerania to Gdańsk parallel to the Baltic coast, forming the main connection between Gdańsk and Szczecin.
At present, the only significant section of S6 that has been built is the Obwodnica Trójmiejska (Tricity Bypass) from Gdańsk to Gdynia which is 38.6 km (24.0 mi) long. Also a part of S6 is 16.3 km (10.1 mi) bypass of Słupsk that was completed in October, 2010.[1] The bypass of Nowogard, was completed in December, 2011
In July, 2010 the route between Goleniów and Słupsk was finalized - it will be about 180 km (110 mi) long, and pass just south of Kołobrzeg and then north of Koszalin.[2] The road will be dual carriageway, with 27 interchanges and 130 viaducts, with about 20% of it overlapping the current route of National Road 6 (DK6).[2] Due to doubts about financing construction was not expected to start before 2020.[3] but later the schedule was accelerated. The tenders for design-build contracts on the section between Goleniów and Koszalin were announced in August, 2014, with expected completion around 2018. The exact route of S6 between Słupsk and Gdańsk has not yet been determined.
After World War I the German HaFraBa association had already set up plans to build an Autobahn along the route from Berlin through the Polish Corridor to the Free City of Danzig and East Prussia (today informally known as Berlinka). The construction was pushed by the Nazi authorities after 1933 as an extraterritorial Reichsautobahn across the Polish Corridor of pre-World War II Poland further south than the modern S6 freeway has been planned for, however the road was never completed.
Sections of the expressway
Expressway section | Length | Constructed | Note |
---|---|---|---|
Szczecin Tczewska - Goleniów Północ | 24.6 km | 1976-1979 | overlaps with S3 on this section, tender for its reconstruction in progress |
Goleniów Północ- Nowogard Zachód | 19.2 km | 2015–2019 | tender for design-build contract issued in August, 2014, contract signed in November 2015 [4][5] |
Nowogard Zachód - Nowogard Wschód | 9.4 km | 2010–2011 | opened December 2011 |
Nowogard Wschód- Płoty | 20 km | 2015–2019 | tender for design-build contract issued in August, 2014, contract signed in November 2015 |
Płoty- Kiełpino | 14.6 km | ||
Kiełpino - Kołobrzeg Zachód | 24 km | ||
Kolobrzeg Zachód- Ustronie Morskie | 14.7 km | ||
Ustronie Morskie - Koszalin | 24.2 km | ||
Koszalin - Słupsk | 66.1 km | – | Tendered |
Słupsk bypass | 16.3 km | 2008–2010 | opened October, 2010. Built as single carriageway with space to add a second one in the future, second carriageway tendered. |
Słupsk- Gdynia | 105.5 km | – | Tendered |
Tricity Bypass II(near Żukowo) | 32.7 km | ||
Tricity Bypass | 38.6 km | 1973–2008 | built in stages starting in 1973 |
References
- ↑ www.gddkia.gov.pl
- 1 2 Article in Glos Szczecinski „Szóstka” z Goleniowa do Słupska będzie ekspresowa i przez Kołobrzeg
- ↑ Rząd szykuje się na ograniczenie budowy dróg,
- ↑ Document from gddkia.gov.pl
- ↑ "Mapa autostrad i dróg ekspresowych w Polsce - SISKOM & SSC". ssc.siskom.waw.pl. Retrieved 2015-11-27.
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Expressway S6 (Poland). |