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With
the massive increase in traffic that has ensued from the
Kingdom's industrial and agricultural development, it
has been necessary to upgrade many of the inter-city
roads to expressways, with anything up to eight lanes
for traffic. Some of the more important inter-city
highways are;
-
Dammam
- Abu Hadriya - Ras Tanura Highway (257 kms
-
Khaybar
- Al Ola Highway (175 kms)
-
Makkah
- Madinah Al Munawarah Highway (421 kms)
-
Riyadh
- Dammam Highway (383 kms)
-
Riyadh
- Sedir - al Qasim Highway (317 kms)
-
Riyadh
- Taif Highway (750 kms)
-
Taif
- Abha-Gizan Highway (750 kms)
The
cities too have become congested by the growth in
traffic and a number of cities now enjoy the benefits of
modern ring-roads which serve to speed vehicles on their
way and reduce congestion and pollution in city centers.
A
further development is the construction of networks of
over- and under-passes within the cities which again
serve to facilitate driving in city centers.
While
a major effort has been devoted to inter-city and
in-city road-building, agricultural communities have not
been neglected. Even isolated villages are now connected
by road to the main road network, so that the Kingdom
can now boast a fully integrated, modern, nation-wide
network of roads.
The
climate and the terrain of the Kingdom are inimical to
road-building. Burning hot deserts and high mountain
ranges, each pose different but equally challenging
problems for contractors. Nowhere were these problems
more intimidating than in the south west of the Kingdom,
where mountain ranges soar to 3,000 meters. A series of
projects, involving the construction of magnificent
viaducts, has been undertaken so that even the more
inaccessible parts of the Kingdom in this region may now
be reached by road.
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