MarketPyeongtaek–Paju Expressway
Company Profile

Pyeongtaek–Paju Expressway

Pyeongtaek–Paju Expressway (Korean: 평택파주고속도로) is an expressway in South Korea. It connects Pyeongtaek to Paju in Gyeonggi Province. The expressway's route number is 17, which it shares with the Iksan–Pyeongtaek Expressway. This expressway overlaps with the Capital Region Second Ring Expressway at Hwaseong.

History
• 3 Nov 2004 : #411. Pyeongtaek–Hwaseong Expressway was designated • 3 Jan 2008 : Pyeongtaek–Hwaseong Expressway was split to #17. Pyeongtaek–Hwaseong Expressway and #171. Osan–Hwaseong Expressway; and #17. Suwon–Gwangmyeong Expressway was designated • 17 Nov 2008 : Suwon–Gwangmyeong Expressway was renamed to #17. Suwon–Munsan Expressway • 29 Oct 2009 : Pyeongtaek–Hwaseong segment was opened to traffic • 29 Apr 2016 : Suwon–Gwangmyeong segment except Soha IC was opened to traffic • 3 Jul 2016 : Soha IC was opened to traffic • 12 Jan 2018 : Pyeongtaek–Hwaseong Expressway and Suwon–Munsan Expressway were merged to #17. Pyeongtaek–Paju Expressway • 7 Nov 2020 : The section of the Expressway from Seoul to Munsan was opened to traffic • Aug 2026 : The section of the Expressway from Gwangmyeong to Seoul, the last unconstructed part of the Pyeongtaek–Paju Expressway, is scheduled to open to traffic == Compositions ==
Compositions
Lanes • W. Osan JC – S. Gunpo IC; S. Gwangmyeong IC – Seongchae IC/Soha IC: 4 lanes • Oseong IC – W. Osan JC; S. Gunpo IC – S. Gwangmyeong IC: 6 lanes Length • Pyeongtaek – Hwaseong: 26.7 km • Suwon – Gwangmyeong: 27.38 km • Gwangmyeong – Seoul: 17.9 km • Seoul – Munsan: 35.6 km Speed limit • 100 km/h == List of facilities==
List of facilities
IC: Interchange, JC: Junction, SA: Service Area, TG: Tollgate • Light purple (■): Capital Region Second Ring Expressway overlap • Light green (■): Capital Region Second Ring Expressway and Local Route 309 overlap • Light blue (■): Local Route 309 overlap Main Section (Pyeongtaek-Gwangmyeong, Seoul-Paju) S.Gwnagmyeong - Soha Branch line S.Goyang - Bongdaesan Branch line == Major stopovers ==
Major stopovers
; Gyeonggi ProvincePyeongtaek (Oseong-myeon - Cheongbuk-eup) - Hwaseong (Yanggam-myeon) - Pyeongtaek (Seotan-myeon) - Hwaseong (Yanggam-myeon) - Pyeongtaek (Seotan-myeon) - Hwaseong (Yanggam-myeon) - Pyeongtaek (Seotan-myeon) - Hwaseong (Yanggam-myeon) - Pyeongtaek (Seotan-myeon) - Hwaseong (Yanggam-myeon - Hyangnam-eup) - Pyeongtaek (Seotan-myeon) - Hwaseong (Jeongnam-myeon) - Osan (Seorang-dong) - Hwaseong (Jeongnam-myeon - Bongdam-eup - Maesong-myeon) - Suwon Gwonseon-gu (Homaesil-dong - Geumgok-dong - Dangsu-dong) - Ansan Sangnok-gu (Sasa-dong) - Gunpo (Domagyo-dong - Bugok-dong - Daeyami-dong - Sokdal-dong) - Ansan Sangnok-gu (Suam-dong) - Siheung (Jonam-dong - Mokgam-dong - Nongok-dong) - Gwangmyeong (Gahak-dong - Noonsa-dong - Gwangmyeong-dong - Okgil-dong) - Bucheon (Okgil-dong) • Branch 1: Gwangmyeong (Gahak-dong - Soha-dong) ; SeoulGuro District (Hang-dong) ; Gyeonggi Province • Bucheon (Goean-dong - Yeokgok-dong) ; Seoul • Guro District (Onsu-dong) ; Gyeonggi Province • Bucheon (Chunui-dong - Jak-dong) ; Seoul • Yangcheon District (Sinwol-dong) ; Gyeonggi Province • Bucheon (Gogang-dong) ; Seoul • Yangcheon District (Sinwol-dong) ; Gyeonggi Province • Bucheon (Gogang-dong) ; Seoul • Gangseo District (Oebalsan-dong - Gonghang-dong - Banghwa-dong) ; Gyeonggi Province • Goyang Deogyang-gu (Gangmae-dong - Haengsin-dong - Donae-dong - Seongsa-dong - Hwajeong-dong - Seongsa-dong - Wondang-dong) - Ilsandong-gu (Sarihyeon-dong - Munbong-dong - Siksa-dong - Munbong-dong - Seongseok-dong - Seolmun-dong) - Paju (Jori-eup - Geumneung-dong - Adong-dong - Wollong-myeon - Paju-eup - Munsan-eup) • Branch 2: Goyang Deogyang-gu (Deogeun-dong - Hyeoncheon-dong) ==See also==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com