A2 autostrada (Poland)

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File:A2 (Poland) Tarnawa toll plaza, dir. Świecko.jpg
Tarnawa toll plaza
File:PL A2 Poznan Komorniki.JPG
A2 near Poznań, opened in 2003. This picture shows the motorway before a six-lane expansion done in 2019
File:A2 (Poland) 3 km east of Poznań Komorniki interchange.jpg
A2 near Poznań Komorniki interchange, before the six-lane expansion done in 2019
File:A2 Kleszczewo.jpg
A2 near Kleszczewo (east of Poznań), opened in 2003.
File:A2 (Poland) Gołuski toll plaza, Ticket machine.jpg
Ticket machine at Gołuski toll plaza
File:A2 (Poland) Tarnawa toll plaza, price list.jpg
Toll price list (section Gołuski-Tarnawa; 2012)

The A2 motorway in Poland, officially named the Motorway of Freedom (Template:Langx),[1] is a motorway which runs from the Polish-German border (connecting to A12 autobahn near Świecko/Frankfurt an der Oder), through Poznań and Łódź to Warsaw and, in the future, to the Polish-Belarusian border (connecting to M1 highway near Terespol/Brest).[2] It is a part of European route E30.

The motorway between the German border and Warsaw (Script error: No such module "convert".) was constructed between 2001 and 2012 (the first fragment of length Script error: No such module "convert". was originally built between 1977 and 1988 and renovated to modern standards during the construction of the remaining sections). Most of the stretch from the border to Konin is tolled (see Tolls).

Eastwards from Warsaw, A2 is being gradually extended. The first segment of this section was the bypass of Mińsk Mazowiecki, which opened in August 2012. The second segment between Warsaw and Mińsk Mazowiecki was completed in 2020, followed by the section from Mińsk Mazowiecki to Siedlce completed in 2024. The section from Siedlce to Biała Podlaska is under construction and is planned to get completed by 2025.[3] The section from Biała Podlaska to Małaszewicze Cargo Terminal (Script error: No such module "convert".) is under tender, expected to be finished by 2029.[4] The last segment to the Belarusian border (Script error: No such module "convert".) is under design, but its planned construction has been postponed due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[5]

A2 does not formally run through Warsaw itself, instead turning into expressway S2 (constructed between 2010 and 2021).[6] The motorway also does not technically reach the border with Germany as its endpoint is marked near the Świecko interchange ca. Script error: No such module "convert". away from the border, although the remaining section is also a dual-carriageway road mostly up to the motorway standard.

Route

Motorway section Length Construction dates Notes
Świecko (PL/D border) Nowy Tomyśl Script error: No such module "convert". 2009 – 2011 opened 1 December 2011; toll motorway except for its westernmost fragment
Nowy Tomyśl – Poznań Zachód Script error: No such module "convert". 2001 – 2004 opened 27 October 2004; toll motorway
Poznań bypass Script error: No such module "convert". 2001 – 2003/2004 opened 13 September 2003 and 27 October 2004; main part widened to 2x3 lanes in 2019, eastern part currently under reconstruction to 2x3[7]
Poznań Wschód – Września Script error: No such module "convert". 2001 – 2003 opened 27 November 2003; toll motorway
Września – Golina Script error: No such module "convert". 1977 – 1985 opened 9 October 1985; reconstructed 2001–2002; toll motorway since 2002
Golina – Modła Script error: No such module "convert". 1986 – 1988 opened 10 November 1988; reconstructed 2001–2002
Modła – Stryków Script error: No such module "convert". 2004 – 2006 opened 26 July 2006
Stryków – Łódź Północ Script error: No such module "convert". 2008 opened 22 December 2008; 2x3 lanes
Łódź Północ – Warsaw Konotopa Script error: No such module "convert". 2010 – 2012 opened to traffic in May and June 2012, the last parts of it one day before the opening ceremony of UEFA Euro 2012;[8] fully completed in the fall of 2012;[2] planned widening to 2x3 lanes from Łódź to Pruszków and 2x4 lanes from Pruszków to Konotopa
Warsaw southern bypass Script error: No such module "convert". 2010 – 2013
2017 – 2021
Expressway File:PL road sign D-7.svgS2
Warsaw Lubelska – Mińsk Mazowiecki Script error: No such module "convert". 2018 – 2020 Opened on 14. August 2020,[9] Lubelska interchange fully completely in 2021.
Mińsk Mazowiecki bypass Script error: No such module "convert". 2009 – 2012 opened 29 August 2012
Mińsk Mazowiecki – Siedlce Script error: No such module "convert". 2021 – 2024
Siedlce – Biała Podlaska Script error: No such module "convert". 2023 – 2025 Under construction, planned to get opened in late 2025.[10]
Biała Podlaska – Małaszewicze Cargo Terminal Script error: No such module "convert". 2026 – 2029 Under tender.
Małaszewicze – Kukuryki (PL/BY border) Script error: No such module "convert". postponed Design ongoing. Planned construction of this section has been postponed as a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[5]

History of construction

The first highway planned along part of this route was a Reichsautobahn initiated by Nazi Germany to connect Berlin with Poznań (Posen). The construction of this highway, accelerated after Poznań was incorporated into Germany following the Invasion of Poland in 1939, was interrupted by the war and never finished, but traces of its earthworks were clearly visible on satellite photographs for decades afterwards, especially between the border with Germany and Nowy Tomyśl. Most of these traces have now disappeared as the modern motorway was built largely following the same route. A short stretch of the uncompleted highway between the border and Rzepin was finished as a dual carriageway road after 1945, in effect forming an extension of the German A 12 highway (opened as a Reichsautobahn in the 1930s). Except for this stretch, the construction work was not continued in the decades after the war.

New plans to build the A2 motorway were seriously formulated in communist Poland in the 1970s, possibly with the goal of completing it in time for the Moscow Olympics in 1980. Because of the economic crisis which hit the country in the late 1970s and continued throughout the 1980s, only a Script error: No such module "convert". section from Września to Konin was opened in the 1980s. Construction of another stretch (between Łódź and Warsaw) was started and then abandoned, leaving an interesting ruin informally named Olimpijka, which was in turn demolished around 2010 when building of the motorway resumed.

Intensive construction of the motorway started only in 2001 after the fall of communism in Poland in 1989. Out of the planned total length of Script error: No such module "convert"., Script error: No such module "convert". have been completed. A section of about Script error: No such module "convert". (Nowy TomyślPoznańWrześniaKonin) has been fully open since 2004. This section is a toll road, with the exception of a short stretch through Poznań which serves as that city's bypass (between the interchanges at Głuchowo and Kleszczewo). An additional Script error: No such module "convert". section from Konin to Stryków near Łódź was opened on 26 July 2006. A short Script error: No such module "convert". bypass of Stryków, consisting of a 2 km (1.2 mi) extension of the A2 and a provisional single carriageway section of the future A1 motorway, was opened in December 2008, to ease the heavy traffic in that town generated when the motorway reached it.

As of the winter of 2009/2010, the plan was to finish the whole section between the border with Germany and Warsaw by the spring of 2012, giving the Polish capital its first motorway connection to the European motorway network in time for the Euro 2012 football championships. That ambitious goal was jeopardized due to various difficulties encountered in finalizing the construction contracts and the delays that resulted. The Script error: No such module "convert". section from Stryków to Warsaw was to be built in a public-private partnership, but the negotiations between the government and private companies interested in participating collapsed in February 2009 due to disputes over financing terms.[11] It was then decided that this section of the motorway would be built using public funds alone. The new bidding process was started on 27 March,[12] and the contracts for design and construction of the road were signed on 28 September.[13] The section had been divided into 5 parts and so construction work began in 2010. The contractors were required to have the motorway open to traffic in time for Euro 2012. This goal was an ambitious one and ultimately proved challenging, given the possibility of unexpected delays during construction[14] and the fact that the Chinese consortium abandoned the project less than a year later,[15] so that new contractors had to be selected to replace it. The goal was to have this motorway stretch provisionally opened to traffic in time for Euro 2012, even if it is not fully completed, with various restrictions such as a lower speed limit to ensure safety. For a while it was not clear whether even this limited goal would be reached, but the motorway opened to traffic in June 2012 after very intensive construction work in the final few months.

In November 2011, construction of the stretch from the German border to Nowy Tomyśl had been completed. The road was opened to public traffic on 1 December. Toll plazas on this stretch of the highway weren't opened until May 2012 so use of the western section of the A2 was free of charge until then.[16]

In May 2013, the interchange with the S3 (Jordanowo) was opened to traffic.[17] First stretch is between the interchange with the A2 motorway and the Świebodzin North interchange. In June 2013, the S3 was extended further and opened to traffic to reach from the Świebodzin South interchange to the existing stretch of the S3 expressway at Sulechów. In July 2013, the elevated bypass of Świebodzin between the interchanges of Świebodzin North and Świebodzin South fully opened to traffic thus fully extending the S3 from Szczecin to Sulechów.[18]

Guarantee scandal

After COVEC withdrew from completing its construction of the A2, Bank of China was to pay a performance guarantee to the Polish government's roads organization GDDKiA. However, with Export-Import Bank of China, they refused to pay this; only Deutsche Bank honored its obligations under the court decision.[19]

Plans

The eastern section from Warsaw to the border crossing with Belarus at Kukuryki near Brest (connecting with M1), about Script error: No such module "convert". in length, is largely under construction. The decision finalizing the route of this section was announced in December 2011,[20] the exception having been a short Script error: No such module "convert". section of A2 forming the bypass of Mińsk Mazowiecki which was constructed between August 2009 and August 2012.[21] The section between Warsaw and Mińsk Mazowiecki was opened in 2020.[22] The longest section from Mińsk Mazowiecki to Biała Podlaska (Script error: No such module "convert".) is in realization (design-build contracts) and is planned to get completed by 2024.[3] The last segment to the Belarusian border (Script error: No such module "convert".) is under design.[5]

It is worth noting that the A2 motorway doesn't actually run through Warsaw, as the inhabitants of the districts through which it was to pass have successfully blocked its construction. This outcome was somewhat unusual, since the corridor for the motorway has been reserved by the city planners since the 1970s and kept free of construction. Instead, the traffic is rerouted through two express roads (S2 and S8), of lower standard than the originally planned motorway. One of these roads (S2) runs along the originally planned motorway corridor. In the most affected area, the district of Ursynów, the express road runs in a tunnel, built at considerable expense.

Route description

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See also

References

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External links

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Template:Polish highways