Brenner Autobahn
Motorway A13 | |
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Autobahn A13 | |
Brenner Autobahn | |
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Route information | |
Length: | 36 km (22 mi) |
Major junctions | |
From: | Inntal Autobahn |
To: | Autostrada A22 |
Location | |
Regions: | Tyrol |
Major cities: | Innsbruck |
Highway system | |
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The Brenner Autobahn (Italian: Autostrada del Brennero or Italian: AutoBrennero, English: Brenner Motorway) refers to a major European trunk route, which connects Innsbruck in Austria to Modena in northern Italy.[1]
Numbered as the A13 in the Austrian section, the motorway is relatively short and entirely located within the state of Tyrol. Upon reaching the Italy-Austria border at the Brenner Pass (1,374 m (4,508 ft)), the motorway becomes A22 in Italy and runs to Modena, where it connects to the A1 motorway between Milan and Rome.[2] It is part of the major European route E45.
The historic Brenner Pass is the one of the lowest among the Central Eastern Alps; this favourable location was therefore suitable for building the first motorway crossing among the Alpine main chains. Unlike other higher passes across the Alps, the Brenner Pass remains open all-year round and through the winter months. Construction of the motorway began in 1959 and the Brenner Autobahn, including the Bridge of Europe (Europe's highest motorway bridge then), was partially open in 1963.
Route
Austria
The A13 begins in the south of Innsbruck from the east-west motorway A12 Inntal Autobahn (Inn Valley Motorway), which links Bregenz in western Austria to Kufstein near the border of Bavaria in Germany. At 565 m (1,854 ft) above sea, the Brenner Autobahn climbs up the Wipptal (Wipp Valley), passes by the villages Steinbach and Gries-am-Brenner, and reaches the Brenner Pass at 1,374 m (4,508 ft) above sea.
Italy
After passing through toll gates 200 metres south of the Italy-Austria border, the A22 motorway begins its gradual descent through the Eisack Valley. It passes by the villages of Sterzing and Brixen before arriving outside Bolzano at 262 m (860 ft) above sea. After Bolzano, the motorway continues to Auer, Trento, Rovereto, Ala and meets the A4 Milan-Venice Highway west of Verona. Beyond Verona, the motorway continues to Mantua and Modena, where it terminates and meets the A1 motorway.
Tolls
The Brenner Autobahn is a toll route in both Austria and Italy. When travelling on the Austrian A13, drivers are required to pay extra tolls (German: Maut), either by credit card or cash at the toll plaza at the Schönberg im Stubaital junction or via a Videomaut prepaid system. As the Brenner Autobahn is a so-called special toll section (German: Sondermautstrecke), it is exempt from the toll vignette usually obligatory on Austrian motorways and expressways.
See also
References
- ↑ "RIS Dokument". bka.gv.at.
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-10-26. Retrieved 2007-10-15.
External links
Media related to Brenner Autobahn A13 at Wikimedia Commons