Misplaced Pages

A4 motorway (Serbia)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Road in Serbia
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German. Click for important translation instructions.
  • Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Misplaced Pages.
  • Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
  • You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Misplaced Pages article at ]; see its history for attribution.
  • You may also add the template {{Translated|de|Autoput A4}} to the talk page.
  • For more guidance, see Misplaced Pages:Translation.
Autoput A 4 shield}} Autoput A 4
Serbian: Autoput A4
Serbian Cyrillic: Аутопут А4
Route information
Part of E80
Maintained by JP "Putevi Srbije"
Length107 km (66 mi)
Major junctions
From A1 E75 at Trupale
Major intersectionsNiš, Bela Palanka, Pirot, Dimitrovgrad
To I-8 E80 at Gradina border crossing Bulgaria
Location
CountrySerbia
Major citiesNiš, Bela Palanka, Pirot, Dimitrovgrad
Highway system
A3 A5

The A4 motorway (Serbian: Аутопут А4, romanizedAutoput A4) is a motorway in Serbia and it spans for 107 kilometers (66 mi).

History

This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "A4 motorway" Serbia – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (November 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

The ancient Roman road Via Militaris connecting Balkans, central and western Europe had a similar route to the modern-day A4 motorway. The old highway which is still in partial use was constructed during 1960s and 1970s. Soon, there began to be, especially during the summer season, too many vehicles using the road which made it unsafe on some parts. So in the 1990s the construction of a modern motorway started.

Beginning of construction

The first section of the motorway were 3 km from Trupale interchange to Komren on entrance in Niš which was constructed in the period 1990–1992. After 1992, due to the wars in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, as well as UN sanctions towards FR Yugoslavia, construction of motorways in Serbia stopped until the wars ended. Construction of the Komren — Prosek section, which is usually referred as Niš bypass, started in 1998, but was cancelled due to the war in Kosovo and NATO intervention. Construction of this section was completed in 2006. Soon after, project of completion of the motorway started.

Construction of rest of the motorway

The first two sections on which construction started in 2010 were Pirot east — Dimitrovgrad (14.3 km) and Dimitrovgrad bypass (8.6 km). Next year, construction started on Crvena Reka — Čiflik (12.7 km), while in 2012, construction of Prosek — Crvena Reka (22.5 km) commenced. Finally in 2013, construction started on sections Čiflik — Staničenje (12.1 km) and Staničenje — Pirot east (16.6 km). First completed section was Pirot east — Dimitrovgrad in 2016, but it could not be opened until two neighboring sections were completed. The next two completed sections were Crvena Reka — Čiflik and Čiflik—Staničenje which were opened in July 2017.

In July 2017, the section Prosek—Bancarevo (9.2 km) was also completed, but it was still not opened because Bancarevo — Crvena Reka section was not completed at the time.

In August 2017, the first carriageway of motorway was opened of 5.1 kilometers-long part of section Staničenje — Pirot east from end of bridge Nišava 4 to Sarlah tunnel.

In September of same year, for traffic were opened the last 7.2 km of section Staničenje — Pirot east (from exit of tunnel Sarlah to end of section), the section Pirot east — Dimitrovgrad and the first 6.8 km of the Dimitrovgrad bypass (from beginning of section to Gradinje cut). Also, 1.2 km of half-profile motorway were opened on Dimitrovgrad bypass.

In March 2018, full-profile motorway was completed on 5.1 km-long part of section Staničenje — Pirot east on which first carriageway was opened in 2017. Also were opened another 0.6 km of full-profile motorway and 0.6 km of second carriageway on Dimitrovgrad bypass.

In June 2018, the last 0.6 km of the second carriageway on the Dimitrovgrad bypass was opened. In June, was also opened first carriageway on 2 km from bridge Nišava 2 to bridge Nišava 4 on section Staničenje — Pirot east, while the second carriageway on this part was opened in July 2018.

Route

Motorway begins at Trupale interchange near Niš, at the junction with A1 motorway and runs eastward, to the Gradina border crossing with Bulgaria, near Dimitrovgrad. The motorway is part of the Pan-European corridor X and is planned to be connected with the Bulgarian Europe motorway that will run to Sofia.

List of exits

This article contains a bulleted list or table of intersections which should be presented in a properly formatted junction table. Please consult this guideline for information on how to create one. Please improve this article if you can. (November 2021)
Nr km Name Route Places
0 Trupale A1 / E75 Kragujevac, Belgrade, Novi Sad, Sremska Mitrovica, Leskovac, Vranje, Priština
1 2 Niš north 158 Niš, Niš Constantine the Great Airport
2 9 Niš east 426 Niš, Niška Banja
3 17 Malča 35 Svrljig, Knjaževac, Zaječar
4 46 Bela Palanka 223 Bela Palanka
5 70 Pirot west 259 Pirot
6 80 Pirot east 259 Pirot
7 96 Dimitrovgrad 259 Dimitrovgrad
8 103 Gradina 259 Gradinje, Dimitrovgrad

References

Roads in Serbia
Motorways / State IA roads (autoput, pl. autoputevi;
državni put IA reda, pl. državni putevi IA reda)
Expressways (brzi put, pl. brzi putevi)
State IB roads (državni put IB reda, pl. državni putevi IB reda)
State IIA roads (državni put IIA reda, pl. državni putevi IIA reda)
Categories: