Civic Boulevard
Native name市民大道 (Chinese)
TypeHighway
LocationTaipei, Taiwan
Construction
Completion1997
Civic Boulevard
Chinese市民大道
Road name sign in Civic Boulevard

The Civic Boulevard (Chinese: 市民大道; also called 5th Blvd) is a 4 to 6-lane highway located in Taipei, Taiwan. It was completed in 1997 as part of a multi-modal reconstruction project to improve transportation networks in congested central Taipei. The highway begins at the MacArthur Bridges in the east (connecting the Neihu district, and Keelung Road (in the Xinyi and Songshan districts), heads west to an interchange with the Zhongxiao Bridge and the HuanHe Expressway, providing direct access to Taipei Main Station, which is just south of the Civic Blvd. Expressway in the Zhongzheng district. Since Civic Blvd. is elevated, there is also a surface-level frontage road system below the highway, connecting intersecting arterials with highway ramps. As part of the larger project, the elevated Civic Blvd. Expressway was constructed to provide a new, east–west highway through Taipei, moving the Taipei railway railroad tracks underground to reduce congestion at surface railroad crossings, and providing new underground parking options. Other additions to this project constructed new underground shopping malls in the vicinity of Taipei Main Station and provisions for utilities. In the future, tracks for the Taiwan High Speed Rail system will be added under existing tracks for the THSR's extension to Nangang in 2012.

Major interchanges

  • Zhongxiao Bridge/Huanhe Expressway (1st Ave.) - half-interchange with surface arterial and direct-flyover ramps to Zhongxiao Bridge and Huanhe Expressway
  • Chongqing N. Road (4th Ave.) - half-interchange
  • Xinsheng Expressway (8th Ave.)/Jinshan N. Road, Xinsheng S. Road/Songjiang Road (9th Ave.)Bade Road - full interchange
  • Guangfu S. Road (13th Ave.), 5th Blvd (surface arterial) - half-interchange
  • Keelung Road - ramps to surface arterial (to Xinyi and Songshan) & direct-flyover ramps to MacAuthur bridges (to Neihu)

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.