Swedish Road Administration

The Swedish Road Administration (Swedish: Vägverket), formerly The Royal Board for Public Road and Water Structures, was a Government agency in Sweden. Its primary responsibility was to organise building and maintenance of the road network in Sweden. Its headquarters were located in Borlänge.

Vägverket
Government agency
SuccessorSwedish Transport Administration
Founded1 April 1983
Defunct31 March 2010
Headquarters,
Area served
Sweden

History

The Swedish Road Administration was founded in 1841 as The Royal Board for Public Road and Water Structures (Swedish: Kongliga styrelsen för allmänna wäg- och wattenbyggnader) and was responsible for Sweden's canals and roads.

In 1993 the National Road Safety Administration (Trafiksäkerhetsverket) was merged into SRA.

In 2009 the responsibility for the vehicle register and issuing of drivers' licenses,[1] was moved to a new authority, Transportstyrelsen. At the same time the department for the actual road work was separated from Vägverket into a government owned company, called Svevia. For a number of year this department, then called Vägverket Produktion, was a profit-making organisation competing with private companies.

The agency was merged with the Swedish Rail Administration (Banverket) on 1 April 2010 to create the new Swedish Transport Administration (Trafikverket).

gollark: The AI is as it is because I don't understand minimax or alpha-beta pruning and was in a hurry, and with the ugly hack shoved on top of it to make it react to instant threats it actually works quite well. Also computing power constraints.
gollark: Anyway, I assume people are curious about the implementation of #4 now.
gollark: Keyboards are the most common way code is written.
gollark: Well, I imagine they used a keyboard, one they shared with Olivia.
gollark: Irrelevant.

References

  1. About Swedish Transport Agency



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