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Germany Switzerland: Highway system; ... Overall Map of E-road Network (2007) ... Toggle the table of contents. European route E41.
Germany (following the Rhine and the German/Swiss border) Lörrach → Rheinfelden → Bad Säckingen → Albbruck → Waldshut-Tiengen → Klettgau (partly ) Switzerland. Schaffhausen Germany. Singen → Überlingen → Friedrichshafen → Lindau (partly A98) Lindau → Memmingen → Landsberg am Lech → Munich
Historic Rhine bridge between Diessenhofen (left) and Gailingen (right), completed in 1816 Customs facilities between Konstanz (Germany) and Kreuzlingen (Switzerland). The border between the modern states of Germany and Switzerland extends to 362 kilometres (225 mi), [1] mostly following Lake Constance and the High Rhine (Hochrhein), with territories to the north mostly belonging to Germany ...
Germany Switzerland ... Overall Map of E-road Network (2007) This page was last edited on 28 July 2024 ... Toggle the table of contents.
Map of the Swiss autobahn network. The Swiss autobahn/autoroute network has a total length (as of April 2012) of 1,763.6 kilometres (1,095.9 miles), of the planned 1,893.5 kilometres (1,176.6 miles), and has, by an area of 41,290 km 2, also one of the highest motorway densities in the world with many tunnels. There are 200 tunnels with a total ...
State District Location km mi Exit Destinations Notes; North Rhine-Westphalia: Kleve: Emmerich am Rhein: 0.000: 0.000: 1: E35 / A 12 west – Elten, Babberich: Continuation into the Netherlands; eastern end of A12 concurrency; western end of A 3 concurrency
Therefore, only the synoptic map of the first volume is up-to-date: Volume 1 for railways/funiculairs, cableways, and boats: synoptic map; Volumes 2 and 3 for buses in western and eastern Switzerland: synoptic map (only last version of 2017)
The European route E27 is a road in Europe, part of the United Nations International E-road network, running between Belfort, France and Aosta, Italy. [1] Between these two cities, most of the route passes through French-speaking Switzerland, including a section along the eastern shore of the Lake Geneva, and a mountain section that peaks at just above 1,900 metres in the Great St Bernard Tunnel.