San Tin Highway
This article needs additional citations for verification. (August 2019) |
San Tin Highway | |
---|---|
Part of Route 9 | |
Route information | |
Maintained by Highways Department | |
Length | 7.9 km (4.9 mi) |
Existed | 1993–present |
Major junctions | |
North end | San Tin (near Chau Tau) |
3; Route 3 at Au Tau | |
South end | Kam Tin (near Au Tau) |
Location | |
Country | China |
Special administrative region | Hong Kong |
Highway system | |
San Tin Highway (Chinese: 新田公路; pinyin: Xīntián Gōnglù; Cantonese Yale: san1 tin4 gung1 lou6) is a northeast-southwest expressway at San Tin in north-western New Territories of Hong Kong. San Tin Highway connects Fanling Highway at its northeastern end at San Tin Interchange[1] to a fork at the Tsing Long Highway and Yuen Long Highway at Kam Tin River east of Yuen Long at the southwestern end of the San Tin Highway. San Tin Highway is also part of Route 9. The road was completed between 1991 and 1993.[2]
Description
[edit]San Tin Highway connects the Tsing Long Highway and the Yuen Long Highway north of Au Tau, near the new town of Yuen Long. It is also part of Route 9. The road was completed between 1991 and 1993.[2] The speed limit of the expressway is 100 km/h.
The intersection between San Tin Highway and Fanling Highway is the San Tin Interchange. Slip roads from San Tin Interchange on to San Sham Road lead 2 km north to Hong Kong's only 24-hour border crossing at the Lok Ma Chau Control Point–Huanggang Port border crossing with Shenzhen in mainland China. The slip roads were completed in January 2007.[3] Before their construction, the vast amount of lorries and goods vehicles using the roundabout caused serious traffic congestion, on San Sham Road and occasionally on San Tin Highway.
Before the completion of Tsing Long Highway, the southern end of the Highway connected to Castle Peak Road and Au Tau Interchange. When Tsing Long Highway was opened in 1998, San Tin Highway was connected to it, thus linking up with Tai Lam Tunnel and Yuen Long Highway. The interchange near Fairview Park is the roundabout which has the most exits in Hong Kong. It has 7 entrances and exits which lead to:
- Fairview Park (Joining Fairview Park Boulevard)
- San Tin Highway (Bidirectional)
- Castle Peak Road — Tam Mi (Bidirectional)
- San Tam Road (Bidirectional)
Interchanges
[edit]This article contains a bulleted list or table of intersections which should be presented in a properly formatted junction table.(November 2021) |
San Tin Highway | ||
Northbound exits | Exit number | Southbound exits |
continues as Fanling Highway | ||
End San Tin Highway | Start San Tin Highway | |
SAN TIN INTERCHANGE Lok Ma Chau, San Tin, Kwu Tung San Sham Road, Castle Peak Road - San Tin, Castle Peak Road - Chau Tau, Kwu Tung Road | 10 | SAN TIN INTERCHANGE Lok Ma Chau, San Tin, Kwu Tung San Sham Road, Castle Peak Road - San Tin, Castle Peak Road - Chau Tau, Kwu Tung Road |
San Tin, Mai Po Mai Po Lung Road, Shek Wu Wai Road | 10A | no exit |
Fairview Park and Kam Tin Fairview Park Boulevard, Castle Peak Road - Tam Mi, San Tam Road | 11 | Fairview Park and Kam Tin Fairview Park Boulevard, Castle Peak Road - Tam Mi, San Tam Road |
Start San Tin Highway | End San Tin Highway continues on as Yuen Long Highway intersects with Tsing Long Highway |
References
[edit]- ^ "San Tin Interchange" Atkins Global
- ^ a b Bolchover, Joshua; Hasdell, Peter (2016). Border Ecologies: Hong Kong's Mainland Frontier. Birkhäuser. p. 104. ISBN 3035602840.
- ^ "Improvements Works to San Tin Interchange, Lok Ma Chau" chunwo.com
External links
[edit]- Geographic data related to San Tin Highway at OpenStreetMap
Preceded by Fanling Highway | Hong Kong Route 9 San Tin Highway | Succeeded by Yuen Long Highway |