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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Taxonomy of Road  





2 Types of roads  



2.1  Lower capacity roads  



2.1.1  Street  





2.1.2  Primitive roads  







2.2  Large roads  





2.3  Private roads  





2.4  Intersecting roads  





2.5  Material type  





2.6  Other thoroughfares  







3 Road types by features  



3.1  Notes  







4 References  





5 External links  














Types of road






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Asphalt road in Norway

Aroad is a thoroughfare, route, or way on land between two places that has been surfaced or otherwise improved to allow travel by foot or some form of conveyance, including a motor vehicle, cart, bicycle, or horse. Roads have been adapted to a large range of structures and types in order to achieve a common goal of transportation under a large and wide range of conditions. The specific purpose, mode of transport, material[1][2] and location of a road determine the characteristics it must have in order to maximize its usefulness. Following is one classification scheme.

Taxonomy of Road[edit]

Marohn distinguishes between roads that are designed for mobility which he terms "roads" and those that function to "build a place", build community wealth and provide access to land. He argues the value of a road in terms of both community wealth and mobility is maximised when the road speed is either low or high, but not at midpoints such as 45mph. He refers to this low-value midpoint of speed and land access as a stroad.[3]: 69 

Types of roads[edit]

Lower capacity roads[edit]

Tree tunnel in Florida
  • Street
  • Avenue
  • B road (disambiguation)
  • Brick Road
  • Boulevard
  • Bundesstraße
  • Byway
  • Causeway
  • Circle
  • Collector road
  • Corniche
  • Close
  • Crescent
  • Court
  • Cul-de-sac / Dead end (street)
  • Drive
  • Frontage road
  • Gemeindestraße
  • Highway
  • Kreisstraße
  • Lane
  • Landesstraße
  • Living street
  • Loop
  • One-way street
  • Path
  • Place
  • Plaza
  • Road
  • Roundabout (Also see intersecting roadways)
  • Route
  • Side road
  • Single carriageway
  • Stravenue
  • Terrace
  • Tree tunnel
  • Way
  • Woonerf
  • Street[edit]

    Primitive roads[edit]

    Hollow way on the side of La Meauffe, witness of the battle of the hedges in 1944)

    Large roads[edit]

    The A8 AutostrasseinSwitzerland.
  • Arterial road
  • Autostrasse
  • Dual carriageway
  • Expressway
  • Local-express lanes
  • Farm to Market Road
  • Parkway
  • Beltway
  • Reversible lane
  • Trunk road
  • Turnpike
  • Autostrada A1 in Italy
  • Autopista
  • Autostrada
  • Controlled-access highway
  • Freeway
  • High-quality dual carriageway (HQDC)
  • Interstate Highway
  • Limited-access highway
  • Motorway
  • Super two
  • Private roads[edit]

    Glenbervie House driveway

    Intersecting roads[edit]

    Roundabout

    Material type[edit]

    Roads also may be classified based on their pavement material types. For instance, the Long-Term Pavement Performance database includes more than 30 types of pavement types for roads in the US and Canada.[2][4][5] However, a more generic classification of roads based on material type is as follows.[5][6]

    Other thoroughfares[edit]

  • Bus lane
  • Canal
  • Carpool lane
  • Cycle track
  • Cycling infrastructure
  • Flight deck
  • Footpath (also pedestrian way, walking trail, nature trail)
  • Free-market roads
  • National roads
  • (Native American) Indian route
  • Paper street
  • Race track
  • Runway
  • Stroad
  • Shunpike[9]
  • Wildlife crossing
  • Road types by features[edit]

    In this list, roads names are used in different areas and the features of the roads varies. So this table address the differences in that usage when needed.

    Name Country subdivision Access type Speed Cross traffic Divided Notes
    2+1 road Ireland High No Yes
    2+1 road North America High No Optional
    2+1 road Sweden Junction (roundabout) High No Yes
    2+2 road High No Yes Type of dual carriageway
    Alley Uncontrolled Low Yes No
    Arterial road High No Optional
    Autobahn Germany Interchange High No Yes
    Autocesta Interchange High No Yes
    Autopista Interchange High No Yes
    Autoroute Interchange High No Yes
    Autoroute Canada Interchange High No Yes expressway is synonymous with freeway or autoroute depending on the province
    Autostrada Italy Interchange High No Yes
    Autostrasse Interchange High No Yes
    Autoestrada Portugal Interchange High No Yes
    Avtomagistral (variously translated) Russia High Yes Designated so according to the communication importance; features vary
    Boulevard Uncontrolled Low Yes No
    Business route Uncontrolled Low Yes No
    Collector/distributor road High No Optional
    Cul-de-sac Uncontrolled Low Yes No
    Distributor road High No Optional
    Divided highway High No Optional
    Driveway Uncontrolled Low Yes Optional
    Dual carriageway Ireland intersection High Yes Yes
    Dual carriageway Singapore intersection High Yes Yes
    Dual carriageway UK Uncontrolled Any Yes Yes
    Express-collector High No Optional
    Expressway Partial Varies Limited Varies General definition
    Expressway US Partial Varies Limited Yes General US definition[10]
    Expressway Canada Interchange High No Yes expressway is synonymous with freeway or autoroute depending on the province
    Farm-to-market road High No usually a state highwayorcounty highway
    Freeway US Interchange High No Yes
    Freeway Canada Interchange High No Yes expressway is synonymous with freeway or autoroute depending on the province
    Frontage road Argentina Partial Low Yes No
    Frontage road China Partial Low Yes No know locally as service roads or auxiliary roads
    Frontage road US Uncontrolled or Partial Low Yes No Can be one way roads with opposing directions on either side of the adjoining freeway
    High-quality dual carriageway Interchange High No Yes
    Highway High No Optional
    Lane Uncontrolled Low Yes No
    Link road High No Optional
    Motorway Interchange High No Yes
    Parkway High No Optional
    Provincial road Italy Uncontrolled Low Yes No
    Provincial road Netherlands Uncontrolled Low Yes No
    Provincial road South Africa Uncontrolled Low Yes No
    Provincial road Turkey Uncontrolled Low Yes No
    Regional road Ireland Uncontrolled Low Yes No
    Regional road Italy Uncontrolled Low Yes No
    Road Uncontrolled Low Yes No
    Semi-highway Interchange High No Yes
    Single carriageway Uncontrolled Low Yes No
    Street Uncontrolled Low Yes No
    Superhighway Interchange High No Yes
    Super two High No Optional
    Thruway Interchange High No Yes
    Two-lane expressway High Yes No

    Notes[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ Piryonesi, Sayed Madeh (November 2019). Piryonesi, S. M. (2019). The Application of Data Analytics to Asset Management: Deterioration and Climate Change Adaptation in Ontario Roads (Doctoral dissertation) (Thesis).
  • ^ a b Elkins, G.E., Schmalzer, P., Thompson, T., and Simpson, A. 2003. Long-Term Pavement Performance Information Management System Pavement Performance Database User Reference Guide.
  • ^ Marohn, Charles L. Jr. (2021). Confessions of a recovering engineer: transportation for a strong town (1st ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey. ISBN 978-1-119-69929-3. OCLC 1253442641.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • ^ Piryonesi, S. M.; El-Diraby, T. E. (2020) [Published online: December 21, 2019]. "Data Analytics in Asset Management: Cost-Effective Prediction of the Pavement Condition Index". Journal of Infrastructure Systems. 26 (1): 04019036. doi:10.1061/(ASCE)IS.1943-555X.0000512. S2CID 213782055.
  • ^ a b Piryonesi, Sayed Madeh (November 2019). Piryonesi, S. M. (2019). The Application of Data Analytics to Asset Management: Deterioration and Climate Change Adaptation in Ontario Roads (Doctoral dissertation) (Thesis).
  • ^ Way, N.C., Beach, P., and Materials, P. 2015. ASTM D 6433–07: Standard Practice for Roads and Parking Lots Pavement Condition Index Surveys.
  • ^ "9 Types of Roads in civil Engineering and Construction". 2 October 2020.
  • ^ "Properties of bituminous materials and Uses, Chemical composition". 9 October 2020.
  • ^ "shunpike". Dictionary.com. Dictionary.com, LLC. Retrieved 15 May 2019. A side road taken, instead of a turnpike or expressway, to avoid tolls or to travel at a leisurely pace.
  • ^ Section 1A.13, Paragraph 27, Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, 2003 ed., rev. 1.[1]
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Types_of_road&oldid=1223799424"

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