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European route E18

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European route E18

關於European route E18

E18 is a European route from the United Kingdom, moving north-east across the North Sea towards Scandinavia, and from there continuing east across the Sea of Åland to Finland and along the Gulf of Finland to Saint Petersburg on the Russian side. It connects the capitals of Finland, Norway and Sweden.

European route E18旅遊指南

城市概覽

The E18 is the main east-west route in southern Norway and central Sweden; about 1000 km of the E18 run through the two countries. The route connects Oslo and Stockholm, and is the main east-west road through Oslo. Likewise, the E18 is the main road of Finland's southern coast (which historically was the richest part of the country), and is a main route from Saint Petersburg to the West. The road's route through the UK crosses Northern Ireland, southern Scotland and northern England. A ferry crossing is made between Larne (NI) and Cairnryan (Scot.). The E18 is not signed as such anywhere in the UK, and there is no direct ferry connection from Great Britain to Norway. An overland purist would have to make a long detour via the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark and southern Sweden; alternatively, you could fly from Edinburgh to Oslo.

如何抵達

See Northern Ireland for the western end and Saint Petersburg for the eastern one. For joining the route halfway, Norway and Sweden are well connected to Denmark, while the Stockholm region (Nynäshamn and Stockholm), as well as Helsinki, have some ferries across the Baltic Sea.

順遊推薦

Other European routes in the Nordic countries European route E4 Spans 1,590 kilometres between Haparanda in the north and Helsingborg in the south. European route E6 shares as bit of road with the E45 near Gothenburg. The route runs all the way from Trelleborg to Kirkenes in the far north-east of Norway, close to Russia. The road is very scenic, running through fjords and mountains, and for 1,000 km in the Arctic. E69 is a spur from E6, reaching the northernmost point of the European road network. European route E8 from Turku in south-western Finland to Tromsø in Norway, along the Finnish west coast and by the rivers at the border to Sweden. European route E10 meets the E45 in Gällivare, Sweden, from which it connects to Luleå and Å in Norway. European route E12 from Mo i Rana in Norway to Helsinki in Finland, with a ferry over the Gulf of Bothnia, in Norway and Sweden following the Blue Highway. European route E14 connects Trondheim with Sundsvall, and as such its length of 449 km is entirely in Scandinavia. European route E16 , like some other E-routes listed below starts in the British Isles and officially crosses the North Sea by boat to Bergen, albeit as of 2020 there are no ferries plying the routes of such E-roads (ie. between a pair of ends of the roads). From Bergen it makes up the main road to Oslo, then it goes north a bit, crosses into Sweden and ends in Gävle. European route E20 comes in from the UK to Esbjerg, and the Scandinavian section crosses Denmark west to east, then crosses Öresund bridge from Copenhagen to Malmö. Then E20 connects Sweden's three biggest cities, going up to Gothenburg (together with E6), then to Stockholm before crossing by ferry to Tallinn. European route E22 is one of the longest European routes going from the UK deep into Asian Russia. The Scandinavian section goes from Trelleborg along Sweden's southern and eastern coasts to Norrköping where it's supposed to cross the Baltic Sea to Ventspils, Latvia (no ferry for this exac

城市概覽改寫自 Wikipedia,旅遊指南來自Wikivoyage (CC BY-SA)。照片來自 Wikimedia Commons.

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