Jingcheng Expressway

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jingcheng Expressway
Jīngchéng Gāosù Gōnglù
京承高速公路
京承高速公路
China Road Numbering S102 (Beijing)
Length 70 km
Route by administrative areas Beijing
Termini Taiyanggong, Beijing
Miyun (Shayugou), Beijing
Exits 16
Service areas 1
Jingcheng Expressway Map

The Jingcheng Expressway (Chinese: 京承高速公路; pinyin: Jīngchéng Gāosù Gōnglù)is an expressway in China which links Beijing to Chengde in Hebei province. At present, it is 70 km in length.

It is a new expressway linking the northeastern portion of the 3rd Ring Road with the north and north-eastern outlying regions of Beijing municipality. It leaves Beijing heading north, eventually turning northeast later.

The Jingcheng Expressway gets its name by the combination of two one-character Chinese abbreviations of both Beijing and Chengde (Beijing -- Jing, Chengde -- Cheng).

Contents

The Jingcheng Expressway passes through the municipality of Beijing and Hebei province.

Basic Route: Beijing (Taiyanggong - Wanghe Bridge - Gaoliying - Huairou - Miyun - Gubeikou) - Luanping (Hebei) - Chengde

Note: Portions of the route that are under construction or projection are in italics. The portion Taiyanggong - Wanghe Bridge (heading out of Beijing) is fully accessible only if entering the expressway from the 3rd Ring Road in an anticlockwise direction. The same portion heading into Beijing is interrupted halfway through. This section will be completed in full soon. Theoretically (although unofficially) there could even be a connection to the 2nd Ring Road; two express road bridges (currently carrying no traffic), along with a rail bridge, sit above Taiyanggong, and both entrances to the expressway from the 3rd Ring Road merge first as one access path before merging onto the expressway itself.

Status: Stage 1 (Wanghe Bridge - Gaoliying) is now open to the general public. Stage 2 (Gaoliying - Houshagou) is now open.

Jingcheng Expressway at the starting point, after the 3rd Ring Road (October 2004 image)
Jingcheng Expressway at the starting point, after the 3rd Ring Road (October 2004 image)
Jingcheng Expressway within the 5th Ring Road (March 2003 image)
Jingcheng Expressway within the 5th Ring Road (March 2003 image)

The expressway was first opened in 2002. 21 kilometres of the expressway are now open to the public (from Wanghe Bridge on the Northeastern 4th Ring Road to Gaoliying on the Northern 6th Ring Road).

An additional portion is under construction. This is a stretch connecting Gaoliying to Huairou and Shunyi areas, near Shayugou.

In addition, the Jingcheng Expressway is also expected to link up with the project northern stretch of the Airport Expressway. This will begin at Lutuan, about halfway through the current Jingcheng expressway, and will be completed in less than two years' time.

The construction of the Jingcheng Expressway is being felt -- traffic to Chengde is currently partially affected by the roadworks.

Minimum 50 km/h, maximum 120 km/h. Speed checks are rare; so far, only one near the Huanggang/Yandan exits (heading toward Chengde) and one after the 5th Ring Road (heading toward central Beijing).

CNY 0.5/km as of Jingcheng Road Toll Gate north of Laiguangying for sections north of the toll gate.
Entire stretch from Wanghe Bridge to Gaoliying costs CNY 10 (price for small passenger cars).
Networked with 6th Ring Road toll system.

6 lanes (3 up, 3 down) for sections closer to Beijing, 4 lanes for other sections.

Good to excellent.

Relatively uncongested, especially north of the Jingchenglu Toll Gate.

Beijing Section: N. 3rd Ring Road, N. 4th Ring Road, N. 5th Ring Road, Yandan, N. 6th Ring Road

Beijing Section: A service area is under projection and construction is expected at Xiaotangshan (Tugou).

Ring Roads of Beijing: Connects with the N. 3rd Ring Road at Taiyanggong, the N. 4th Ring Road at Wanghe Bridge, the N. 5th Ring Road at Laiguangying, and the N. 6th Ring Road at Gaoliying.

The Jingcheng Expressway is home to some splendid scenery between the Northern 5th Ring Road and the Northern 6th Ring Road. The good sights are expected to continue when the entire expressway is completed in 2006. By then, users of the road will be able to see even the Great Wall of China at Jinshanling!

Symbols: ↗ = exit; ⇆ = main interchange; ¥ = central toll gate

Expressway begins at Taiyanggong
Expressway (Stage 1) ends at Gaoliying

Expressway (Stage 1) begins at Gaoliying
Expressway (Stage 1) ends at Wanghe Bridge


Roads and Expressways of Beijing Expressway Overpass
Main Roads: Chang'an Avenue (East, West) | Ping'an Avenue | Zhongzhou Road (North, South)
Ring Roads: Open: 2nd Ring Road | 3rd Ring Road | 4th Ring Road | 5th Ring Road | 6th Ring Road
Projected: 7th Ring Road |
Expressways: Open: Badaling Expressway (Jingda Expressway) | Jingcheng Expressway | Airport Expressway | Jingtong Expressway | Jingha Expressway | Jingshen Expressway | Jingjintang Expressway (Jinghu Expressway) | Jingkai Expressway | Jingshi Expressway (Jingzhu Expressway)
Partially under construction: Jingcheng Expressway | Jingkai Expressway | Northern Airport Line | Jingping Expressway | Jingbao Expressway | Litian Expressway
Projected: 2nd Airport Expressway | Jingjin Expressway (North, South)
7 National Expressways: Jingtai Expressway (projected) | Jinghu Expressway | Jinggang'ao Expressway (partially complete) | Jingkun Expressway | Jingla Expressway (projected) | Jingwu Expressway (projected) | Jingha Expressway (alternate route)
National Highways G101 | G102 | G103 | G104 | G105 | G106 | G107 | G108 | G109 | G110 | G111 | G112
Advanced Search
Included Web Search Engines


Safe Search

close

Top Matching Results

Occasionally Search.com will highlight specialized results that are based on the context of your query. Examples of specialized results include specific links to news, images, or video.

Top Matching Results may highlight information from other Search.com pages, content from the CNET Network of sites, or third party content. The listings are based purely on relevance. Search.com does not receive payment for listings in this section but our partners that provide this data may get paid for listing these products.

Sponsored Links

This section contains paid listings which have been purchased by companies that want to have their sites appear for specific search terms and related content. These listings are administered, sorted and maintained by a third party and are not endorsed by Search.com.

Search Results

Search.com sends your search query to several search engines at one time and integrates the results into one list which has been sorted by relevance using Search.com's proprietary algorithm. You can customize the list of search engines included in your metasearch from the preferences.

The search engines that are used in your metasearch may allow companies to pay to have their Web sites included within the results. To view the Paid Inclusion policy for a specific search engine, please visit their Web site. Search.com does not accept payment or share revenue with any search engine partner for listings in this section.