Ring I

Ring I (pronounced "ring one", Finnish: Kehä I, Swedish: Ring I) is the busiest road in Finland, carrying up to 113,000 vehicles per day. It is the innermost of the three beltways in the Greater Helsinki region, numbered as regional route 101 and runs from the easternmost part of Espoo to Itäkeskus in eastern Helsinki. The total length is 24.2 kilometres (15.0 mi), of which 16 km (9.9 mi) are in Helsinki. It is primarily intended for local traffic—before the large road numbering change in the 1990s and the reconstruction of Ring III, Ring I was also designated as a bypass for avoiding Helsinki centre.

Regional Road 101
  • Seututie 101
  • Regionalväg 101
Ring I
  • Kehä I
  • Ring I
Route information
Length24.2 km (15.0 mi)
Major junctions
FromItäväylä
ToLänsiväylä
Location
Major citiesHelsinki
Highway system
Highways in Finland

Overview

Ring I has at least two lanes per direction for its entire length but a speed limit that never exceeds 80 kilometres per hour (50 mph) owing to heavy traffic. With the introduction of new grade-separated interchanges, provisions have been made to increase the speed limits to 70–80 km/h. Eventually, all of the junctions on Ring I will be upgraded to grade-separated interchanges. However, the road was not originally constructed as a motorway, which limits its capacity..

gollark: It might be related to your apparent virus infection. Probably something is trying to meddle with network traffic.
gollark: Why do you ask?
gollark: > For many years, WinPcap has been recognized as the industry-standard tool for link-layer network access in Windows environments, allowing applications to capture and transmit network packets bypassing the protocol stack, and including kernel-level packet filtering, a network statistics engine and support for remote packet capture.
gollark: https://www.winpcap.org/
gollark: Oh, and to respond very late to this:> uh... why would you buy those things = it's a pretty generic componentI don't mean why those specific things, I mean why suddenly buy a bunch of solar hardware?

See also

References

    Media related to Kehä I at Wikimedia Commons


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