Bundesstrasse 107
The national highway 107 (abbreviation: B 107 ) is a German national road . It begins in Pritzwalk on the B 103 and ends in Chemnitz . On the section between Havelberg and Genthin , the B 107 belongs to the Romanesque Road . Another section near Wiesenburg belongs to Deutsche Alleenstrasse .
history
According to the chronicle, the road from Pritzwalk via Genthin to Eilenburg was completed in 1840 (at least in the Havelberg area). It was designated as Prussian State Office No. 85 north of Genthin .
The southernmost section of the route between Claußnitz and Chemnitz, Chemnitztalstraße , was only opened in 1880 and led to the settlement of several factories in the Chemnitztal . The obelisk on King Albert Rock commemorates the completion in 1880.
The long-distance road 107 (FVS 107) established in 1932 , known as Reichsstraße 107 (R 107) from 1934 , just like the Prussian State Office, only led from Pritzwalk to Genthin. It was not until the 1960s that the road from Genthin to Chemnitz, known again (until 1990) was extended to 107 (F 107) .
Until 2006 the road led from Oranienbaum via Wörlitz and a yaw ferry across the Elbe to Coswig (Anhalt) . The poor condition of the road (large stone pavement in the flood area of the Elbe) between Wörlitz and Coswig, the requirements of the monument protection and the non-passable and limited loading of the yaw cable ferry led to the change of route. The B 107 now leads to the B 187 in Coswig (Anhalt). From the Dessau-Ost junction of the A 9 , it then leads to Oranienbaum.
See also
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ four-lane in the city of Chemnitz