Autopista AP-9

Road in Spain
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish. Click [show] for important translation instructions.
  • Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
  • Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
  • You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at [[:es:Autopista del Atlántico]]; see its history for attribution.
  • You may also add the template {{Translated|es|Autopista del Atlántico}} to the talk page.
  • For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
Autopista AP-9 shield}}
Autopista AP-9
Autoestrada do Atlántico
Route information
Part of E1 and E70
Maintained by Audasa
Length219.6 km (136.5 mi)
Existed1973–present
HistoryOpened: 1973
Completed: 1992
Major junctions
FromFerrol
ToTui
Location
CountrySpain
ProvincesA Coruña, Pontevedra
Major citiesFerrol, A Coruña, Santiago de Compostela, Pontevedra, Vigo
Highway system
  • Highways in Spain
A-8 A-10

The AP-9 or Autoestrada do Atlántico is a toll motorway in Galicia, Spain. It starts in A Coruña and runs south past the cities of Santiago de Compostela, Pontevedra and Vigo, before ending at the town of Tui, a few kilometres north of the Portuguese border at the Minho River.

The AP-9 is 178 km (111 miles) in length. The first 16 km (10 miles), from A Coruña to the A-6 autovía near the towns of Guísamo and Betanzos, form part of European route E70, while the remainder forms part of European route E01. Between A Coruña and Vigo, the motorway runs parallel to the N-550 road, and between Vigo and Tui it runs parallel to the A-55 autovía .

The AP-9 has two spurs: the 36 km (22.5 mile) long AP-9F from Guísamo to Ferrol, which runs parallel to the N-651 road and also forms part of European route E01; and the 4 km (2.5 mile) long AP-9V, which runs into the centre of Vigo.

History

Construction of the motorway, originally known as the A-9, began in the mid-1970s with the section between Pontevedra and Vigo, including the Rande Bridge, and also the section between A Coruña and Santiago de Compostela. The latter opened in 1979, the former two years later.

Between 1988 and 1992, these two sections were gradually linked. In 1994, construction of the spur to Ferrol commenced.

In the late 1990s, the A-9 was extended from Vigo to what is now the junction with the Autoestrada AG-57. Then, in the early 2000s, it was extended from this point to Tui. The spur to Ferrol was completed in 2003, and in the same year the A-9 was redesignated the AP-9, as part of the general redesignation of Spanish autopistas and autovías.

Gallery

External links

  • Autopista AP-9 Concessionaire
  • Autopista AP-9 in Google Maps
  • v
  • t
  • e
Highways in Spain
National routes
Regional routes
Andalusia
Aragon
Asturias
Basque Country
  • A-636
  • BI-631
  • BI-636
  • GI-11
  • GI-20
  • N-102
  • N-124
  • N-622
  • N-637
  • N-644
Castile–La Mancha
  • CM-10
  • CM-40
  • CM-41
  • CM-42
  • CM-43
  • CM-44
  • CM-45
Castile and León
Catalonia
Extremadura
  • EX-A1
  • EX-A2
  • EX-A3
  • EX-A4
Galicia
  • AG-3
  • AG-5
  • AG-6
  • AG-41
  • AG-54
  • AG-55
  • AG-56
  • AG-57
  • AG-58
  • AG-59
  • AG-64
La Rioja
  • LR-111
  • LR-134
Madrid
  • M-45
  • M-406
  • M-407
  • M-409
  • M-501
  • M-506
  • M-607
Murcia
  • RM-1
  • RM-2
  • RM-3
  • RM-11
  • RM-12
  • RM-15
  • RM-16
  • RM-17
  • RM-19
  • RM-23
Valencia
  • CV-10
  • CV-18
  • CV-30
  • CV-31
  • CV-33
  • CV-35
  • CV-36
  • CV-40
  • CV-60 [es]
  • CV-70
  • CV-80
  • CV-84
  • CV86 [es]
  • CV-90
  • CV-95
Insular routes
Gran Canaria
Lanzarote
Mallorca
  • Ma-1 [es]
  • Ma-13 [es]
  • Ma-19 [es]
  • Ma-20
Tenerife
Municipal routes
  • Barcelona
    • B-10
    • B-20
  • Madrid
Urban routes
  • A Coruña
    • AC-10
    • AC-11
    • AC-12
    • AC-14
  • Alacant/Alicante
  • Almería
    • AL-12
    • AL-14
  • Avilés
    • AI-81
    • AI-82
  • Badajoz
    • BA-11
    • BA-20
  • Barcelona
  • Burgos
  • Cáceres
    • CC-11
    • CC-21
    • CC-23
  • Cádiz
  • Cartagena
    • CT-31
    • CT-32
    • CT-33
    • CT-34
  • Castelló/Castellón
    • CS-32
  • Córdoba
  • Cuenca
    • CU-11
  • Elche/Elx
    • EL-20
    • EL-28
  • Ferrol
    • FE-11
    • FE-12
    • FE-13
    • FE-14
  • Gijón
  • Granada
    • GR-12
    • GR-14
    • GR-16
    • GR-30
    • GR-43
  • Huelva
    • H-30
    • H-31
  • Jaén
    • JA-12
    • JA-14
  • León
  • Lleida
    • LL-11
    • LL-12
  • Logroño
  • Lugo
    • LU-11
  • Madrid
    • M-11
    • M-12
    • M-13
    • M-14
    • M-21
    • M-22
    • M-23
    • M30
    • M-31
    • M40
    • M-45
    • M50
  • Málaga
    • MA-20
    • MA-21
    • MA-22
    • MA-23
    • MA-24
    • MA-40
  • Mérida
    • ME-11
  • Murcia
    • MU-30
    • MU-31
  • Oviedo
    • O-11
    • O-12
    • O-13
  • Ourense
    • OU-11
  • Palencia
    • P-11
  • Pontevedra
    • PO-10
    • PO-11
    • PO-12
  • Puertollano
    • PU-11
  • Salamanca
  • Santander
    • S-10
    • S-20
    • S-30
  • Santiago de Compostela
    • SC-11
    • SC-12
    • SC-20
  • Segovia
    • SG-20
  • Seville
    • SE-20
    • SE-30
    • SE-40
    • SE-50
  • Soria
    • SO-20
  • Tarragona
  • Toledo
    • TO-20
    • TO-21
    • TO-22
    • TO-23
  • Valladolid
    • VA-11
    • VA-12
    • VA-20
    • VA-30
  • Valencia
  • Vigo
    • VG-20
  • Zamora
    • ZA-11
    • ZA-12
    • ZA-13
    • ZA-30
  • Zaragoza
  • 1 numbered N-111
  • 2 numbered N-230
  • 3 numbered C-33
  • 4 numbered C-16
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
  • VIAF