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[[pt:Hringvegur]]
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[[sv:Ringvägen, Island]]
[[sv:Ringvägen, Island]]

Travel agencies like [http://www.icelandvisitor.com Iceland Visitor]offer organised self-drive tours around the ring road in Iceland.

Revision as of 16:03, 12 November 2006

Route 1 (Iceland)
The Ring Road of Iceland and some towns it passes through.

1. Reykjavík
2. Borgarnes
3. Blönduós
4. Akureyri
5. Egilsstaðir
6. Höfn
7. Selfoss

Route 1 or the Ring Road (Icelandic: Þjóðvegur 1, Hringvegur) is a main road in Iceland that runs around the island and connects the different parts of the country together. The total length of the road is 1339 km.

For almost all its length, the road is two lanes wide with one lane in each direction except when it passes through larger towns and cities where it may be expanded to more lanes as well as in the Hvalfjörður Tunnel. The road is paved with asphalt for most of its length but there are still stretches of it in the east part of the country that are unpaved and with gravel surface.

The amount of traffic on the road varies a lot depending on location; in and near Reykjavík it is around 5,000–10,000 vehicles per day but the stretches furthest away from larger towns see fewer than 100 vehicles per day on average.

Although paved, some portions of the road are still the original 1940's country roads, and contain extreme hazards, such as blind bends and blind hills (this is especially true of the section between Borgarnes and Blönduós) and narrow passes. Now carrying many times the traffic of the original roads, they are unsafe and should be driven with great care.

The circle was finished in 1974 when the bridge over Skeiðará river in Southern Iceland was opened.

File:Typicalroute1.jpg
A typical stretch of Route 1, picture taken in Borgarfjörður

The road has been popular with tourists for decades since it covers a lot of the country and many interesting sights are not far from it. It has been an especially popular tour with Icelandic families on summer vacation, but in later years the route is becoming more popular with foreigners who like to either rent a car or bring their own on the ferry to Seyðisfjörður.