Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Infraestruturas de Portugal

Public company administering road and rail infrastructure in Portugal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Infraestruturas de Portugal, S.A. (IP) is a state-owned company which resulted from the merger of Rede Ferroviária Nacional (REFER) and Estradas de Portugal (EP). It manages the Portuguese rail and road infrastructure.[1]

Quick facts Founded, Headquarters ...

Network

Summarize
Perspective

Road

Total length, as of January 2019: 15.253 km[2]

Main roads and motorways:[3]

  • Valença International Bridge, (IP1 variante de Valença)
  • IC28 (Ponte de Lima-Ponte da Barca)
  • VCI/IC23 (Via de Cintura Interna do Porto) with the Arrábida and Freixo bridges and (A20) access
  • EN1/IC2 (Porto-Lisboa)
  • Variante de Vilar Formoso (IP5)
  • IP3 (Coimbra-Viseu)
  • IC6 (IP3-Tábua)
  • IC12 (Santa Comba Dão-Canas de Senhorim)
  • A23 (section Torres Novas-Abrantes)
  • IP6 no Alto Alentejo (Fratel-Estremoz)
  • IP6 (Peniche-Óbidos)
  • IC13 (Portalegre-Alter do Chão)
  • Salgueiro Maia Cridge e acessos (IC10)
  • Eixo Norte-Sul
  • IC16 (Radial da Pontinha)
  • CRIL/IC17 (Circular Regional Interna de Lisboa)
  • IC19 (Radial de Sintra)
  • IC22 (Radial de Odivelas)
  • IC1 (section Grândola-Albufeira)
  • IC27 (Alcoutim-Castro Marim)
  • Guadiana International Bridge

Rail

Total length, as of January 2019: 2.562 km[2][4]

Lines

New lines

  • The Nova Linha de Évora [pt] is under construction as of 2023.

Main railway stations

Border stations

Junction stations

Metre-gauge stations

  • Mirandela
  • Espinho-Vouga
  • Sernada do Vouga
  • Águeda
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads