In the
United States, the national
Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) uses "full control of access" only for
freeways. Expressways are defined as having "partial control of access" (or
semi-controlled access). This means that major roads typically use
interchanges and
commercial development is accessed via cross roads or
frontage roads, while minor roads can cross at grade and farms can have direct access, some may be
two lanes. It also states that freeways and expressways have to be
divided highways. This definition is also used by some states, some of which also restrict freeways only to
motor vehicles capable of maintaining a certain speed. Some other states use "controlled access" to mean a higher standard than "limited access", while others reverse the two terms.
Oceania Australia , a typical non-
freeway-type
motorway in New Zealand While
Australia's larger capital cities feature
controlled-access highway networks, the smaller metropolitan areas mostly rely on limited-access highways for high-speed local traffic. In
South Australia the terms "expressway" and "freeway" can be synonymous. The Southern and Northern Expressways are both controlled-access highways. However, perhaps confusingly, the Port River Expressway is a limited-access highway.
Dual carriageways that connect capital cities and regional centres, such as the M31
Hume Highway between Sydney and Melbourne, are almost all limited-access highways. In spite of this, 'freeway' terminology is used on signage for most regional limited access highways in the state of
Victoria.
New Zealand: Expressway, Motorway The terms
Motorway and
Expressway in New Zealand both encompass multi-lane divided
freeways as well as narrower 2 to 4-lane undivided expressways with varying degrees of
grade separation; the difference being that in New Zealand a
Motorway has certain additional legal traffic restrictions.
Asia China crossing over the
Si Du River Bridge in
Enshi Prefecture,
Hubei,
China. The
China National Highways (
CNH/
Guodao) (
simplified Chinese: 中华人民共和国国道;
traditional Chinese: 中華人民共和國國道;
pinyin:
Zhōnghuá Rénmín Gònghéguó Guódào) is a network of
trunk roads across
mainland China. As of 2024, the network encompasses over 1.9 million kilometers of highways, making it one of the most extensive in the world. Key milestones include the completion of major expressways by 2008 and ongoing expansions to enhance connectivity, especially in western and less developed areas. Apart from the
expressways of China that were planned and constructed later, most of the CNH are not
controlled-access highways.
Pakistan The
Expressways of Pakistan are a network of multiple-lane, high-speed highways in Pakistan, which are owned, maintained and operated federally by Pakistan's
National Highway Authority. They are one class lower than the country's
motorways and are usually upgraded versions of the national highways. The total length of Pakistan's expressways is as of November, 2016. Around of expressways are currently under construction in different parts of country. Most of these expressways will be complete between 2017 and 2020.
India as seen from
Khandala The national highways in
India are a network of
limited access roads owned by the
Ministry of Road Transport and Highways. National highways have
flyover access or some
grade-separation. However, they should be distinguished from expressways in that they are not completely grade-separated. Expressways in
India make up more than of the
Indian National Highway System on which they are the highest class of road. The
National Highways Development Project is underway to add an additional of expressways to the network by the year 2023.
Iran Expressways in Iran are one class lower than
freeways and are used in large urban areas such as
Isfahan,
Mashhad, or
Tehran and between other important cities (Usually two
province capitals) in rural and desert areas. The speed limit in Urban areas is between and in rural and desert areas between .
Japan The term
expressway as used in English in Japan refers to both
freeway-style highways and narrower, more winding, often undivided
Regional High-Standard Highways . Both types of expressways have a combined length of as of April 2012.
Malaysia Limited-access roads in Malaysia usually, but not always, take the name ( – this is also the name for
expressways). Highways normally have a lower speed limit than expressways (but still higher than the rest of the local road network), and permit at-grade intersections and junctions to residential roads and shopfronts, although
grade separation is still typical. Highways are normally toll-free and are owned and operated by the
federal government. Notable examples of limited-access roads are the
Federal Highway,
Skudai Highway,
Gelugor Highway,
Kuantan Bypass and
Kuching Bypass.
Philippines Limited-access roads in the Philippines are called
expressways, which can refer to both highways built to freeway standard and are often tolled, as well as lower-standard highways with partial grade separation. The former are designated controlled-access highways (HSH-1), while the latter are designated
regional high-standard highways (HSH-2). The Philippine expressway network as of 2025 is entirely formed of tolled controlled-access highways, with no HSH-2 expressways being implemented yet.
Singapore Limited-access roads in Singapore are formally known as (in contrast to
controlled-access highways which are known as
expressways). While still functioning as high-speed roads, semi-expressways may still have
at-grade intersections with
traffic lights, and speed limits are not uniform.
Grade separation is, however, still typical at major junctions. Five roads have been designated as semi-expressways:
Bukit Timah Road,
Jurong Island Highway,
Nicoll Highway,
Outer Ring Road System and
West Coast Highway.
South Korea Motorways in South Korea (자동차 전용 도로,
jadongcha jeonyong doro, literally 'motor vehicle-only road') include various grades of highways other than
expressways. Contrary to the expressway in South Korea, the status of motorway is a measure of traffic control rather than a class of road. For example,
Jayu-ro is a segment of national route 77 as well as a motorway. As of June 2011, 1,610 km of highways in total were designated as motorways. (1,052 km national highways, 351 km metropolitan highways, 185 km regional highways and 20 km municipal highways) Like on expressways, motorcycles are not permitted.
Taiwan (R.O.C.) Expressways in Taiwan may be
controlled-access highways similar to National Freeways or limited-access roads. Most have Provincial (as opposed to National) Highway status, although some are built and maintained by cities. All provincial expressways run east–west except for
Provincial Highway No. 61, which runs north–south along the west coast. Some provincial expressway routes are still under construction.
Europe Austria: Schnellstraße In Austria the speed limit on a
Schnellstraße is .
Schnellstraßen are very similar to Austrian
Autobahnen (freeways/motorways); the chief difference is that they are more cheaply built with smaller curve radius, often
undivided and have fewer bridges and tunnels.
Belgium: Autoweg In Belgium an
autoweg is a public road, the beginning of which is indicated by the first signboard (F9) and the end by the second sign (F11). An important difference with an
autosnelweg is that crossroads as well as traffic lights can be on an
autoweg. In Belgium there is no specific speed regulation for an
autoweg. Only motor vehicles and their trailers (with the exception of mopeds), agricultural vehicles and the towing of fairground vehicles, as well as four-wheelers (without passenger compartment), are allowed to drive on an
autoweg. An
autoweg can consist of two or more lanes. The driving directions can be separated by a roadmarking, or by a central reservation. If a public road (
autosnelweg,
autoweg,
weg) consists of two or more lanes that are clearly separated from each other by a roadside or a space that is not accessible to vehicles, the drivers may not drive on the lane opposite to them.
Bosnia and Herzegovina: Brza cesta/Brzi put Croatia: Brza cesta In
Croatia, the term
brza cesta (lit. "fast road") is used to describe a motor vehicle-only road, usually
grade-separated, without an
emergency lane, with a speed limit of , although it can be lowered, usually to . They range from 2+2 lane
dual carriageways with grade-separated intersections and speed limit (
D2 in
Osijek), four or six-lane urban streets with at-grade intersections with traffic lights (
D1 in
Karlovac) or two-lane
single carriageways with grade-separated intersections (
D33 in
Šibenik). They are either a standalone state road (
D10) or a part of one (Southern Osijek bypass,
D2). Some portions of
motorways are expressways since they are either in construction (
A8 between
Pazin and
Matulji) or designed as such (
A7 in
Rijeka). As a rule, the expressways are not tolled, however major tunnels on expressways are tolled.
Czech Republic: Silnice pro motorová vozidla Roads for motorcars in the
Czech Republic (, are defined as grade-separated dual carriageways. The speed limit is . Road for motorcars road signs are white on blue.
Denmark: Motortrafikvej In
Denmark, a 'motortrafikvej' (
Danish for "motor traffic road") is a high-speed highway normally with a speed limit of . The most common 'motortrafikvej' has two lanes (1+1) or 2+1. The signs for 'motortrafikvej' have white text on blue background.
Finland: Moottoriliikennetie In
Finland, highways are separated into three categories: all-access
valtatie ("main road"), limited-access
moottoriliikennetie ("motor traffic road") and finally
moottoritie ("motorway"); the latter two are marked with green signage, while
valtatie signage is blue. While most of the network is all-access road, of it is motorway, and is limited-access road. The access is limited to motor vehicles faster than , thus excluding pedestrian, bicycle, moped or tractor traffic; furthermore,
towing is not allowed. Limited-access roads are generally similar to motorways, but do not fulfill all the technical requirements, such as several lanes in one direction or separation of opposite directions. Limited-access roads are usually built because the local population density is too low to justify a motorway. Often space has been left during construction for an eventual upgrade to a motorway. Limited-access roads also function as feeder routes for motorways. The general speed limit on main roads and limited-access roads is (summertime) and (wintertime). On motorways the speed limits are respectively. Especially during winter the speed limits can be changed due to weather conditions.
France: voies rapides and voies expresses In France, limited-access roads are usually called '
(fast roads) or ' (express roads or expressways), which are usually dual carriageways built to a lower design standard than
autoroutes. Most such roads are upgrades or bypasses of national roads ('
) or departmental roads ('), or are ring roads around major cities (such as with
Paris's
Boulevard Périphérique) and access is usually through grade-separated interchanges and in some intersections and termini, roundabouts. Such roads usually have blue signs implying traffic restrictions similar to those of autoroutes and a maximum speed limit of that is lowered to during rainy weather.
Germany: Kraftfahrstraße near
Prüm–
Bleialf A
Kraftfahrstrasse (
German for "motor-power road", also colloquially called
Schnellstraße, literally "fast road") in
Germany is any road with access limited to motor vehicles with a maximum design speed of more than , excluding pedestrian, bicycle, moped or tractor traffic. Oversized vehicles are banned. The construction of transregional
Kraftfahrstraßen highways (
Autostraßen) rank below the standard of
German autobahns. With regard to the general
German speed limits, on roads with lanes separated by a median or with a minimum of two marked lanes per direction, an
advisory speed limit (
Richtgeschwindigkeit) of applies.
At-grade intersections are admissible, regulation at
junctions is usually provided by
traffic lights or
roundabouts.
U-turns and any deliberate stopping are prohibited.
Kraftfahrstraßen are out of bounds to
pedestrians, except for special crosswalks.
Hungary: Autóút Expressways in Hungary are called
Autóút (Auto/car road). They are mostly dual carriageways. The main difference between Hungarian motorways and expressways is, that they are more cheaply built with narrower width and often undivided. The maximum speed limit is reduced to for vehicles under 3.5 tons, and for vehicles over 3.5 tons. In Hungary there are multiple types of dual carriageways. One part is almost identical with motorways, but the driving lanes are narrower. Parameters of a 2+2 lane dual carriageway off-habitat area: • Total width of road: 25.60 m • Driving lane width: 3.50 m • Pavement width: 2×10.25 m • Parking lane: 3.00 m • Middle separation area width: 3.60 m Parameters of a 2+2 lane dual carriageway in habitat (town/city) area: • Total width of road: 24.10 m • Driving lane width: 3.50 m • Pavement width: 2×10.75 m • Parking lane: 3.00 m • Middle separation area width: 3.60 m There are also semi-motorways with only one side of the motorway built. After the missing lanes are built, they will become standard motorways.
Ireland: HQDC nearing
Dublin. A
High-quality dual carriageway (HQDC) in Ireland is normally completed to a motorway standard, including no right-turns, but with no motorway restrictions. These are common on the final stretches of motorways nearing a major city, generally in order to enable use of bus stops and city bus services on the particular stretch of road. Speed limits are normally compared to on motorways
Italy: Superstrada -
Porto Torres (
Strada statale 131 Carlo Felice), the main road artery of
Sardinia In Italy there are: Type B highway (or
strada extraurbana principale), commonly but unofficially known as
superstrada, is a divided highway with at least two lanes for each direction, paved shoulder on the right, no cross-traffic and no at-grade intersections. Access restrictions on such highways are exactly the same of
Italian motorways (
autostrade), as well as signage at the beginning and the end of the highway (with the only difference being the background color, blue instead of green). Speed limit on type-B road is . Type C highway (or
strada extraurbana secondaria), a
single carriageway with at least one lane for each direction and shoulders. It may have at-grade, at-level crossings with
railways,
roundabouts and
traffic lights. This category contains also
dual carriageways that can not be classified as type-B highways because of the lack of one or more required features. In absence of specific regulation signs, a type-C road is accessible by all vehicles and pedestrians, even if it has separate carriageways and no cross-traffic. The sign shown here on the left allows access only to motorized vehicles. Speed limit on type-C roads is .
Netherlands: Autoweg expressway that was economically upgraded to (mostly) meet the new
Regional flow road standard. A physical
traffic barrier, and a
hard shoulder were added. The
Netherlands has much more kilometres of motorways (
snelwegen), than expressways (
autowegen). The latter only form a complementary part of the country's main highway network. They are typically shorter than motorways, offering connections of a more regional significance. The general speed limit is . Only faster motor vehicles, both
capable and
legally allowed to go at least , may use the road.
Autowegen are always numbered and mostly signposted with an
N (for
Non motorway highway) and up to three digits, like
N 34. For the most part they fall under national or provincial management. Dutch expressways are built to significantly varying standards. Designs range from fully
controlled-access dual carriageways with
grade separation,
center dividers and full
hard shoulders, to
single carriageways with just one lane per direction and only intermittent shoulder patches called
Vluchthavens (small Lay-bys). Intersections are frequently
at grade with
traffic lights, or they are
roundabouts. There can be
moveable bridges in these roads. In either case, the speed limit is frequently reduced to before reaching the junction or the bridge. Since 1997 a national
traffic safety program called
Sustainable Safety has introduced a new
road categorisation and new design standards. Although
autowegen don't have to conform completely to the new Dutch design standard for regional flow roads (
stroomwegen), many of these roads require at least some upgrades. The ideal is to make expressways divided and grade-separated, as much as possible. Otherwise these roads are downgraded to the safety category of distributor roads, thereby losing their expressway status.
Norway: Motortrafikkvei , Norway In
Norway, a
motortrafikkvei (
Norwegian for "motor traffic road"), formerly called
motorvei klasse B ("class-B
motorway") is a high-speed highway normally with a speed limit of respectively), and mainly with grade-separated intersections. Direction signs for
motortrafikkvei have black text on yellow background, while same signs on
motorvei have white text on blue background. As of October 2017 the Norwegian Road DataBase show approximately of
motortrafikkvei in Norway.
Poland: droga ekspresowa , Poland (plural: ) refers to a type of road in the Polish highway network, with slightly lower technical parameters than the (
motorway), and serving major international and inter-regional purposes. They are often built as
ring roads since they take less space than motorway and allow more entrances and exits. All expressways start with the letter S followed by a number, and are signposted with the
D-7 traffic sign. They can be dual or single carriageways, but as of May 2024, only out of of Polish expressways are single-carriageway. Since 2020, all expressways as well as motorways have grade-separated intersections, which also, since 2022, is a requirement. The speed limit is on dual carriageway or on single carriageway. As of May 2004 the Polish government documents indicated that the country had plans of an expressway and motorway network totalling (including about of motorways). Those limited-access roads, which are not part of the Polish national highway network, are signposted with a separate
B-6/8/9 prohibitory sign, which bans all traffic not allowed on highways.
Portugal: via rápida , Portugal, a single carriageway type
via rápida. In
Portugal, a non-motorway limited access road is commonly referred as a
via rápida (rapid way, plural:
vias rápidas), although there is not a specific official technical designation for it. The legal term
via reservada a automóveis e motociclos (reserved way for automobiles and motorcycles) is used to designate a non-motorway road where motorway rules apply (except the speed limit which is lower). However, this term refers only to the road rules and not to the road technical characteristics. There are two main types of roads commonly referred as
vias rápidas in Portugal. The first type is a limited access road, with dual carriageway and with interchanges grade separation. Many of these roads have all or almost all the technical characteristics of full motorways. Examples are the several urban highways in cities like
Lisbon,
Porto,
Coimbra and
Braga. In
Madeira, the main regional highways, that connect the cities and other important places of the island, are mainly of these type, there are two vias rápidas classified as motorways in the region,
VR1 and
VR2. The second Portuguese type of
via rápida is a highway with all the same characteristics of the above first type, except the number of carriageways that is only one. Examples of this type of roads are the ancient IP4 and IP5 (before being transformed in full motorways), the
Portalegre-
Beja section of the IP2, the Coimbra-
Viseu section of the IP3 and several complementary routes (IC). The dual carriageway
vias rápidas can be classified and signalized as reserved ways for automobiles and motorcycles, cases in which general motorway rules apply, except speed limited which is never above . In dual carriageway
vias rápidas not signalized as reserved ways, normal road rules apply, including speed limit which is never above . Single carriageway
vias rápidas cannot be classified and signalized as reserved ways and so normal road rules always apply there.
Romania In
Romania, such roads are called
drumuri expres (or
drum expres in singular form). Whilst there is only one expressway in Romania so far, their main difference from regular motorways are the lack of
hard shoulders and a slightly lower speed limit of , otherwise, being similar to a motorway regarding
grade separation and featuring at least
2 lanes per direction. Expressways were introduced for the first time on the 2014 roads masterplan. This masterplan envisaged building most planned motorways up to expressway standards, provided that in the future they would be converted to actual motorways. However, by mid-2019, no expressway has been built, nevermind starting works on one, although contracts were signed to allow for their construction, meaning that in the 2020s more expressways will likely be completed. Planned expressways according to CNADNR (Romanian National Company of Motorways and National Roads), based on the 2014 roads masterplan:
Russia Russia has a large federal highway network that totals approximately . Federal highways in the country are classified into two categories: "motorways" (, not the same as the English term
motorway) and "other". In the Road Rules, there are 2 designations for a limited-access road, one being "motorway" and the other being "road for cars"(), on both of which special motorway rules apply. "Roads for cars" are different from motorways by the fact that they don't have to be dual-carriageway, at-grade traffic light intersections are permitted, and the speed limit is still .
Spain: Vía rápida In Spain, expressways are roads with completely restricted access to adjacent properties and, like dual carriageways, without at-grade crossings or intersections with other paths, roads, railway lines, tram lines, etc., that have a right-of-way. They are generally single-carriageway roads with one lane in each direction. Expressway signage has a green background, and the nomenclature is that of the original road. The "expressway" is simply a conventional road with improved traffic flow due to its better design, wider lanes and shoulders (between 1.5 and 2.5 meters wide), full access control, and the absence of at-grade intersections. This improved traffic flow, and therefore greater capacity, makes it a cost-effective alternative to dual carriageways when significant traffic increases are not anticipated. Otherwise, a dual carriageway is planned directly.
Slovakia: cesta pre motorove vozidla A
rýchlostná cesta in Slovakia,(sometimes referred to as cesta pre motorove vozidla) is different from a
diaľnica, with
speed limits restricted to for cars and for trucks. Rýchlostné cesty ("cesty" is the plural form of "cesta") used to be designated by the letter 'R' preceding the road number, however, new road rules introduced in 2020 established that all expressways noted by the letter 'R' were to be considered motorways. A rýchlostná cesta has two lanes on each side and, occasionally, may take the form of a single carriageway. Some motorways which are single carriageways are also known as 'road for motor vehicles'.
Sweden motortrafikled is part of Riksväg (national road) 34 The Swedish road type
motortrafikled is a
road with limited access (all grade-separated, no slow traffic) and two or three lanes. According to the EU's multilingual term base,
motortrafikled should be translated to
expressway,
rapid road or
road with limited access. The same rules apply to a
motortrafikled as to a
motorway - it is basically a half motorway. The speed limit is usually . Many
motortrafikleder are built as
2+1 roads, alternating two lanes in one direction and one in the other, with a narrow fence in between.
Switzerland Autostrasse in
Switzerland. Notice the
speed limit, which is repetitively indicated, and the lack of a central physical barrier In
Switzerland Autostrasse (
German,
auto road),
semi-autoroute, or
semiautostrada (
French and
Italian for
semi-freeway) is a highway that is only allowed to high-speed traffic with no crossings, but it is not the highest class road, the
motorways (
Autobahn/
autoroute/
autostrada). The speed limit on these roads in Switzerland is . Most of the
Autostrasse / semi-autoroutes / semiautostrade have no central barrier separating the
lanes in different directions.
United Kingdom In the United Kingdom, the second tier of high speed roads below
motorways are typically
dual carriageways (although the term "dual carriageway" can refer to roads that are not limited-access, so long as traffic in opposite directions is physically separated). Many roads such as the
A1, the
A14, the
A19 and the
A42 are built to a high quality, in many places they are only intersected by grade-separated junctions, have full barriers at both the road side and the central reservations and in some cases three or more lanes of traffic, however they are not subjected to motorway restrictions as they are typically built to a lower standard, or have existing
rights of way for non motorised vehicles. They may lack some features that a motorway would have, such as hard shoulders, and may have tighter bends and steeper gradients than would be allowed on a motorway or have established rights of way that cannot be removed. The standard motorway speed limit for cars of also applies to many dual carriageways. In March 2015, it was announced that a new standard would be developed to formally designate certain high-quality routes in England as
Expressways. This new standard would have the same motorway regulations as traditional motorways, however would lack a hard shoulder and use traffic management systems like those on smart motorways. An "expressway" is limited to 3 through lanes, they are to be built largely to the same standards as a smart motorway, although some non-standard existing alignments are allowed to remain if they are just short of being standard. Some roads have "expressway" in their name, this has no reflection on the purpose or standard of the road. For example, the
Aston Expressway or the
North Wales Expressway.
North America Canada In Ontario,
expressway is synonymous with
freeway and is used to mean limited-access divided-highways with no at-grade intersections. An example of this is the
Gardiner Expressway through western and downtown Toronto, and once it turns into a 6-lane
arterial road (
Lake Shore Boulevard) east of the
Don River, there is a sign warning of the end of the freeway. The
E. C. Row Expressway in
Windsor, Ontario is a controlled-access divided freeway with grade-separated interchanges, between Ojibway Parkway at its western terminus and Banwell Road at its eastern terminus, where there are traffic intersections at both termini. The
Macdonald–Cartier Freeway would be an example of a route that uses the term
freeway, however, that name is being phased out by the
Ministry of Transportation. In general, the term "expressway" is used more frequently for municipally maintained roads, while provincial freeways are known more by their route number (particularly the
400-series highways are known as Highway 4__) despite some of them having an "expressway" name for all or part of their length, such as the (
Chedoke Expressway/Hamilton Expressway,
Belfield Expressway, and
Airport Expressway). The
Veterans Memorial Parkway in
London, Ontario, has intersections instead of interchanges, and thus is considered an expressway and not a
freeway. It was originally designed with sufficient right-of-way to be built as a full freeway, but a lack of funding forced it to be built with at-grade intersections. Similarly, the
Hanlon Parkway in
Guelph and
Highway 40 in
Sarnia, Ontario were originally opened with intersections in lieu of interchanges, save for the couple grade-separated interchanges.
Regional Road 420 in
Niagara Falls is also an expressway. While
Allen Road and
Highway 400 were originally full freeways, their extensions (for Allen Road to meet Sheppard Avenue and Dufferine Street, and the 400 South Extension which became
Black Creek Drive and handed over to Metro Toronto upon completion) were built as expressways with at-grade intersections. Two sections of
Highway 11, between Barrie and Orillia as well as between Orillia and Gravenhurst, are a
right-in Right-out (RIRO) expressway rather than a full freeway. The joint route of
Highway 35/
115 in
Durham Region is also a RIRO expressway. In most of
Western Canada, an expressway is a high-speed arterial road along the lines of the California definition, while a freeway is fully controlled access with no at-grade intersections. In Alberta, the term "Trail" refers to both full freeways (e.g.
Stoney Trail), or high-speed arterials with a mix of signalized intersections and interchanges (e.g.
Crowchild Trail). The
Yellowhead Trail as it passes through
Edmonton, Alberta has both intersections and interchanges. It is the main east–west artery for the northern half of the city. There are plans to upgrade many of the most congested remaining intersections into interchanges in the near future. In Quebec, the term
freeway is never used, with the terms
expressway (in English) and
autoroute (in English and French) being preferred. English terms are rare, and only found on bilingual signage of expressways (abbreviated "expy") found in
Montreal around bridges and on the
Bonaventure Expressway; these signs are controlled by the federal government. Most of the
Autoroutes are built or at least designed to be upgraded to a full freeway (initially constructed as a
two-lane expressway), a notable exception is the section of
Autoroute 20 through
Vaudreuil-Dorion and
L'Île-Perrot which is an urban boulevard.
United States (Montague Expressway), an American expressway under the MUTCD definition In the United States, an
expressway is defined by the
federal government's
Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices as a divided highway with partial control of access. In contrast, a
freeway is defined as a divided highway with full control of access. The difference between
partial and
full access control is that expressways may have a limited number of driveways and at-grade intersections (thus making them a form of high-speed arterial road), while access to freeways is allowed only at
grade-separated interchanges. Expressways under this definition do not conform to Interstate highway standards (which ban all driveways and at-grade intersections) and are therefore usually numbered as
state highways or
U.S. Highways. This distinction was first developed in 1949 by the Special Committee on Nomenclature of what is now the
American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO). In turn, the definitions were incorporated into AASHTO's official standards book, the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, which would become the national standards book of the
U.S. Department of Transportation under a 1966 federal statute. The same distinction has also been codified into the statutory law of eight states:
California,
Minnesota,
Mississippi,
Missouri,
Nebraska,
North Dakota,
Ohio, and
Wisconsin. However, each state codified the federal distinction slightly differently. California expressways do not necessarily have to be divided, though they must have at least partial access control. For both terms to apply in Wisconsin, a divided highway must be at least four lanes wide. In Missouri, both terms apply only to divided highways at least 10 miles long that are not part of the Interstate Highway System. In North Dakota and Mississippi, an expressway may have "full or partial" access control and "generally" has grade separations at intersections; a freeway is then defined as an expressway with full access control. Ohio's statute is similar, but instead of the vague word "generally", it imposes a requirement that 50% of an expressway's intersections must be grade-separated for the term to apply. Only Minnesota enacted the exact MUTCD definitions, in May 2008. However, many states around the
Great Lakes region and along the Eastern Seaboard have not conformed their terminology to the federal definition. The following states officially prefer the term
expressway instead of
freeway to describe what are freeways in federal parlance:
Connecticut,
Florida,
Illinois,
Maryland, and
West Virginia. In those states, it is common to find Interstate highways that bear the name
expressway. Ultimately, by law it is the federal definition that defines whether a road is classified as an expressway or freeway. No state, for instance, could have what is technically an expressway given Interstate status just because semantically they use the term interchangeably with freeway. Most expressways under the federal definition have
speed limits of in urban areas and in rural areas. Urban expressways are usually free of private driveways, but occasional exceptions include direct driveways to
gas stations and
shopping malls at major intersections (which would never be allowed on a true freeway). The vast majority of expressways are built by
state governments, or by private companies, which then operate them as
toll roads pursuant to a license from the state government. A famous example of a
local government getting into the expressway business is
Santa Clara County in
California, which deliberately built its own expressway system in the 1960s to supplement the freeway system then planned by
Caltrans. Although the county originally planned to upgrade the expressways into full-fledged freeways, such a project became politically infeasible after the rise of the
tax revolt movement in the mid-1970s, which began with
California Proposition 13 in 1978.
South America Brazil In Brazil, an expressway is known as
Via Expressa and its function is to connect the most important streets and avenues of certain cities with their adjacent highways. Because of this, some expressways are numbered (in the same way as highways). According to the
Código Brasileiro de Trânsito (Brazilian Traffic Code), expressways are officially defined as
Vias de Trânsito Rápido (Rapid Transit Routes) and are considered the most important urban roads, with standard speed limits of (unless specified). A few examples of expressways include
Marginal Tietê and
Marginal Pinheiros in
São Paulo;
Avenida Brasil,
Red Line and
Yellow Line in
Rio de Janeiro; among others. == See also ==