- List of Puerto Rico Highways
The highway system in Puerto Rico was established in 1952 and is maintained by the Puerto Rico Department of Transportation and Public Works (Departmento de Transportación y Obras Públicas).The highway system in Puerto Rico is divided into four different classes: the Primary Network, the Urban Primary Network, the Secondary Network, and the Tertiary Network (Spanish: "Red Primaria", "Red Primaria Urbana", "Red Secundaria", and "Red Terciaria", respectively). Highways may change between networks and retain their same numbers.
List of Highways
Below is a list of highways in Puerto Rico (only highways which have at least a section as a primary or urban primary are listed) along with the municipalities where they end. "Italics" indicates a proposed highway.
Interstates
There are three officially designated
Interstate Highways in Puerto Rico . As withInterstate Highways in Alaska and Hawaii, these routes do not connect to theUnited States Interstate Highway system, but still receive funding in a similar fashion to the Interstates in the contiguous US.As with Interstate routes in
Alaska (but notHawaii ), they are unsigned Interstate routes. The designated routes of the three routes — officially PR-1, PR-2 and PR-3 — run along various combinations of Puerto Rico routes. They do not follow the rules of even and odd numbers determining direction.Puerto Rico's interstate highways are not entirely controlled-access. Speed limits are limited to 55 mph (90 km/h) to 65mph (106 km/h). Puerto Rico's
superhighway s are the Autopistas, which are not funded by the Eisenhower Interstate System, but by a system of tolls.Autopistas (Expressways)
Controlled-access highways in Puerto Rico, many (but not all) which are tolled. All Autopistas are signed either as primary or as primary urban routes.
*PRI-2 (Guaynabo to San Juan; San German to Peñuelas)
*PR-5 (Tollway)
*PR-18
*PR-20 (Tollway)
*PR-22 (Tollway)
*PR-26
*PR-30
*PR-52 (Tollway)
*PR-53 (Tollway)
*PR-66 (Tollway, partially opened)Concerns and Problems
Several highways, like PR-2 (Expressway between San German and Peñuelas), PR-30 and PR-52 have serious problems with cracks. Due to the large numbers of trucks in the main highways, as well as the millions of cars which move in them weekly, Puerto Rico primary roads are usually affected by holes that have even been the cause of frequent tire damage and minor accidents. Even when the Department of Transportation repairs these highways with frequency, they are affected again months after the repair.
ee also
*
Autopistas de Puerto Rico
*Interstate Highways in Puerto Rico
*Transportation in Puerto Rico External links
* [http://www.hawaiihighways.com/Puerto-Rico-page1.html Puerto Rico Road Photos]
* [http://mryamamoto.topcities.com/puertorico/Guia_De_Carreterras-Vias_Principales.html Puerto Rico Highway Page]
* [http://www.dtop.gov.pr/act/mapaisla.htm Puerto Rico DOT map of routes (text in Spanish, Adobe Acrobat required to enlarge)]
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