Highways in Greece - Correlation With European Routes

Correlation With European Routes

This is a list of European routes that shows which parts of them run through Greece.

Major routes:

Preveza – Rio - – Patras - - Pyrgos - – Kalamata
Medžitlija-Níki (border with the Republic of Macedonia) – Florina – Florina – Kozani - Kozani – Elassona – Larissa – Lamia - Amfissa – Galaxidi - Galaxidi – Antirio - Rio – Corinth - Corinth – Kalamata - Kissamos – Chania
border with the Republic of Macedonia – Thessaloniki – Athens - Chania – Aghios Nikolaos (will be replaced by )
Bulgarian border – Serres through GR-57, Serres – Thessaloniki
Greek National Road 51
Albanian border at Kristalopigi – Florina – Edessa – Giannitsa – Gefyra (west of Thessaloniki
Egnatia Odos or Via Egnatia, Igoumenitsa - Thessaloniki - border with Turkey
Greek National Road 6 (will be replaced by )
Attiki Odos - Athens – Corinth


Other routes:

Kakavia (Albanian border) -
Greek National Road 5 (will be replaced by )
Preveza-Amfilochia - Karpenisi – Lamia
Greek National Road 39
Elefsina – Thiva (will be replaced by )


Note: when certain highways that carry European routes are replaced with motorways, the European routes will be re-assigned to the new motorways. For example, GR-7 carries the E65 from Tripoli to Kalamata. When the Corinth – Tripoli – Kalamata motorway is complete, E65 will run through it and not through GR-7 any more.

Read more about this topic:  Highways In Greece

Famous quotes containing the words european and/or routes:

    To the cry of “follow Mormons and prairie dogs and find good land,” Civil War veterans flocked into Nebraska, joining a vast stampede of unemployed workers, tenant farmers, and European immigrants.
    —For the State of Nebraska, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    The myth of independence from the mother is abandoned in mid- life as women learn new routes around the mother—both the mother without and the mother within. A mid-life daughter may reengage with a mother or put new controls on care and set limits to love. But whatever she does, her child’s history is never finished.
    Terri Apter (20th century)