Thai highway network

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Highway Sign

The Thai highway network follows the left-hand traffic rule of the road. The network is the twin responsibility of the Department of Highways (DOH, Thai: กรมทางหลวง, Krom Thang Luang), and the Department of Rural Roads (DORR, กรมทางหลวงชนบท, Krom Thang Luang Chonnabot), under the oversight of the Transportation ministry of Thailand. Public highways (ทางหลวง, thang luang) are also called public roads (ถนนหลวง, thanon luang), especially when part of urban streets. The network spans over 70,000 kilometers across all regions of Thailand.[1] Most are single carriageways. Dual carriageways have frequent u-turn lanes and intersections slowing down traffic. Coupled with the increase in the number of vehicles and the demand for a limited-access motorway, the Thai Government issued a Cabinet resolution in 1997 detailing the motorway construction master plan.[2] Some upgraded sections of highway are being turned into a "motorway", while other motorways are not being built from highway sections. See Thai motorway network.

DOH signs for public highways (ทางหลวง, thang luang) are white squares with a black garuda (ครุฑ khrut) centered above the route number.

Arunprasert Road

Signs near the beginning of a route may display the highway's name on a white rectangle above or below the square.

Bypass marker

Highways bypassing city centres bear the principle route number marked "Bypass" in Thai (เลี่ยงเมือง), and sometimes also in English.

Contents

[edit] Types of highways

The 1992 Highway Act (Thai: พระราชบัญญัติทางหลวง พ.ศ. 2535), revised as the 2006 Highway Act (Thai: พระราชบัญญัติทางหลวง (ฉบับที่ 2) พ.ศ. 2549), defines the following five highway types:[3]

A special highway (Thai: ทางหลวงพิเศษ) or motorway is a high capacity highway designed for high speed traffic, for which the Department of Highways carries out construction, expansion, upkeep and repairs, and is registered as such. Motorway entrances and exits have controlled access, and controlled by the DOH. Registration of motorways is overseen by the Director General of the DOH.

A national highway (Thai: ทางหลวงแผ่นดิน) is a primary highway, part of the network connecting regions, provinces, districts, and other important destinations, for which the DOH carries out construction, expansion, upkeep and repairs. Registration of national highways is overseen by the Director General of the DOH.

A rural highway (Thai: ทางหลวงชนบท) or rural road is a highway for which the Department of Rural Roads carries out construction, expansion, upkeep and repairs. Registration of rural highways is overseen by the Director General of the DORR.

A local highway (Thai: ทางหลวงท้องถิ่น) or local route is a highway for which the local administrative organization carries out construction, expansion, upkeep and repairs. Registration of rural highways is overseen by the provincial governor.

A concession highway (Thai: ทางหลวงสัมปทาน) is a highway for which a legal government concession has been granted. Registration of concession highways is overseen by the Director General of the DOH.

[edit] Highway numbering

The first digit of a highway number indicates the region of Thailand it primarily services:

[edit] Number of digits

A single digit number indicates one of the major highways connecting Bangkok to outlying regions:[4]

A two-digit number indicates a main highway for a particular region. For example, Route 22 is a main highway in the northeast that runs between Udon Thani and Nakhon Phanom.[4]

A three-digit number indicates a secondary highway. For example, Route 202 is a secondary highway in the northeast that runs between Chaiyaphum and Khemarat; Route 314 is a secondary highway in the central region, between Bang Pakong and Cha Choeng Sao.[4]

A four-digit number indicates an intra-province highway connecting the provincial capital to the districts, or to important sites in the province. For example, Route 1001 is a northern highway that runs between Route 11 Intersection and Amphoe Phrao; Route 4006 is a southern highway that runs between Route 4 Intersection (Ratchakrut) and Lang Suan.[4]

[edit] Highways by region

[edit] Northern Thailand

[edit] Northeastern Thailand

[edit] Central Thailand including eastern region

[edit] Southern Thailand

(Please expand)

[edit] Department of Rural Roads

DORR rural roads do not follow the regional numbering scheme, above.

YS.4011

Signs are gold-on-blue, with a two-letter province designation prefixed to the road number. Depicted is YS.4011, for a rural road in Yasothon Province. The rural road network measures some 35,000 km, about 82 percent of which is paved. The Department of Rural Roads of the Ministry of Transport takes care of the maintenance of all the rural roads in Thailand.[5]

[edit] Milestones

Main article: Milestone
Milestone as goal is lakh chai (หลักชัย); also see Lak Mueang, Lakh.

Single carriageway milestones (lakh or lak kilomet หลักกิโลเมตร, or หลัก กม.) display the route number on the outline of a garuda on the front; and some, also on top. Located on the right, these count kilometers right up from KM 0 at the road's beginning; as seen on the left from the counter lane, they show how many kilometers are left. On edges facing traffic, DOH milestones usually show distances remaining to two towns (amphoe seat or provincial capital.) Some edges, such as the one depicted to the left, have retroreflector panels. Dual carriageway milestones or posts located in the median show only the kilometer number. (Click on image for other versions depicting edges.)

DORR milestones show the kilometer number, and the edges may show distances remaining to the next two villages.

Older roads built by the Ministry of the Interior Public Works Department (กรมโยธาธิการ กระทรวงมหาดไทย) have only department insigne and kilometer number, and do not show distances on their edges.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Thailand Public Relations Department Transport and Communication, retrieved October 14, 2008
  2. ^ Paper "Privatization of Highway Infrastructure in Thailand" Bureau of Planning, Department of Highways, Thailand retrieved 2008-10-19
  3. ^ DOH website, ประเภททางหลวง, retrieved on November 13, 2008
  4. ^ a b c d DOH website, ระบบหมายเลขทางหลวง, retrieved on November 13, 2008
  5. ^ World Bank, Transport in Thailand, retrieved October 14, 2008


[edit] See also

[edit] External links

  • Asian / ASEAN Highway Route Marker (21MB) Department of Highways Thai-language 18-page file, with 1 index and 8 regional maps of AH system overlaid on existing Thai national highways, plus diagrams of AH route markers. Retrieved 2008-10-14.
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