Essingeleden
History
The road was inaugurated on 21 August 1966 by Tage Erlander with two temporary lanes in each direction on the western half of the road, as Sweden was about to switch over to right-hand sided traffic the next year. The road was fully operational in September 1967 after Sweden had switched over to right-hand side traffic, and Essingeleden became the first six-lane motorway in Sweden.
During the 1990s, the road was repainted from six lanes to eight lanes to increase the capacity.
Plans
Essingeleden has on several occasions been included in plans to create a ring road around Stockholm. Southern Link opened in 2004 and the Northern Link opened 2015. No eastern link has been planned to date (August 2024).
A new parallel motorway is under construction further west, "Förbifart Stockholm". It will have several tunnels and is expected to cost around 25 billion SEK. The Stockholm congestion tax (gross tax amount 800 MSEK/year) is supposed to be used for this and other road and public transit projects in Stockholm. The construction started in 2014 after several years of debating and planning.
Gallery
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Fredhäll bridge in 1964 after a collapse
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Fredhäll tunnel, 1965
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Fredhäll tunnel in 1966, shortly after opening. Notice that only one roadway is used
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Essingeleden on the 3rd of September 1967
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Construction underway at Kungsholmen in 1968
See also
References
- ^ Pia Heick (7 November 2022). "Essingeleden invigs av Tage Erlander och Mälardrottningen år 1966" (in Swedish). SVT Stockholm. Retrieved 16 December 2022.