Bundesstrasse 9

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Template: Infobox high-ranking street / Maintenance / DE-B
Bundesstrasse 9 in Germany
Bundesstrasse 9
map
Course of the B 9
Basic data
Operator: GermanyGermany Federal Republic of Germany
Start of the street: Kranenburg
( 51 ° 49 ′  N , 5 ° 57 ′  E )
End of street: Scheibenhardt
( 48 ° 59 ′  N , 8 ° 9 ′  E )
Overall length: approx. 450 km

State :

Development condition: see below
B 9 to Oppenheim- bei Guntersblum- direction Oppenheim 16.12.2007.jpg
Bundesstrasse 9 in Rheinhessen near Guntersblum
Course of the road
Netherlands Continue on  N325Nijmegen
EU border crossing Border crossing Wyler ( DE ) - Beek ( NL )
State of North Rhine-Westphalia
Kleve district
Bypass Kranenburg bypass  B504
Locality Kleve
flow Spoy channel
crossing Emmericher Strasse B220
bridge Left Lower Rhine route
crossing Kalkarer Strasse B57
Bypass Goch bypass  B504
flow Niers
crossing Asperdener Strasse B504
Junction (2)  Kleve A57 E31
Autobahn beginning replaced by A57 E31
Junction (3)  Goch }A57 E31B67
Locality Rottum
Bypass Weeze bypass 
flow Niers (2 ×)
Locality Kevelaer
bridge Left Lower Rhine route
flow Dondert
Locality Geldern OT Veert
Bypass Bypass of  Geldern B58
flow Niers
flow Gelderner Fleuth
Locality Dungeons
Locality Kerken OT Nieukerk
bridge Left Lower Rhine route
Locality Kerken OT Aldekerk B510
Junction (6)  Dungeons A40 E34
Locality Kerken OT Steeg B509
District-free city of Krefeld
Locality Krefeld
crossing Hülser Strasse B509
Railroad Crossing Silt
bridge Railway bridge ( Duisburg-Ruhrort – Mönchengladbach line on the
left-hand side of the Lower Rhine )
crossing Obergath B57
Junction (25)  Krefeld-Fichtenhain A44
Autobahn beginning replaced by A44 A57 E31
Rhine district of Neuss
Junction (23)  Neuss -NorfA57 E31
Locality Neuss- Grimlinghausen
Junction (22)  Neuss- UedesheimA46
Locality Dormagen
Independent city of Cologne
Locality beginning Beginning of  Cologne
Locality Chorweiler
bridge under A1 E37
Locality Trinkets
Locality Downtown B51 B55 B55a
Locality Rodenkirchen
Village end End of Cologne
Roundabout Cologne distribution group A555 B51
Autobahn beginning replaced by A555 A565
Independent city of Bonn
Junction (6)  Bonn- Endeich A565
Locality beginning Beginning of  Bonn
Locality center B56
Locality Gronau
Junction (1)  Bonn-Bad Godesberg A562
Locality bad Godesberg
tunnel (2000 m)  Bad Godesberg tunnel
Village end End of Bonn
State of Rhineland-Palatinate
Ahrweiler district
Locality Remagen
Start of expressway Beginning of the motor road
Junction Sinzig OT Bad Bodendorf B266
flow Ahr
Junction Sinzig
Expressway end End of the highway
Locality Bad Breisig
Start of expressway Beginning of the motor road
Junction Brohl-Lützing B412
Mayen-Koblenz district
Junction Andernach -Namedy
bridge (480 m)  Namedy flyover
bridge (1080 m)  Krahnenberg Bridge
Junction Andernach -West
Junction Andernach -South
Junction Andernach -EstB256
flow Nice
node Weißenthurm B256
Junction Weißenthurm-Ost
bridge (510 m)  Chained hillside bridge
Junction Mülheim-Kärlich
District-free city of Koblenz
node (10)  Koblenz-North A48 E44
Junction Koblenz-Rheinhafen / Bubenheim
Junction Koblenz-Neuendorf
Expressway end End of the highway
Locality beginning Beginning of the village  Koblenz
crossing Mayener Strasse B416
flow Moselle ( Europabrücke 400 m)
Locality center B49
Locality Karthaus B327
Village end End of town Koblenz
Locality Koblenz-Stolzenfels
Mayen-Koblenz district
Bypass Rhens bypass 
Locality Brey
Bypass Spay bypass 
Rhein-Hunsrück district
Locality Boppard
Bypass Boppard-Bad Salzig bypass 
Bypass Boppard-Hirzenach bypass 
Locality Sankt Goar
Bypass Oberwesel bypass 
Mainz-Bingen district
Bypass Bacharach bypass 
Locality Bingen am Rhein -BingerbrückB48
Start of expressway Beginning of the motor road
flow Near
Junction Bingen- Büdesheim
Junction Bingen- Dietersheim B50
Junction Bingen- Kempten
Junction (13)  Bingen-East A60 E42
Expressway end End of the highway
Autobahn beginning replaced by A60 E42
Independent city of Mainz
Junction (24)  Mainz-Laubenheim A60 E42
Bypass Mainz - Laubenheim bypass 
Mainz-Bingen district
Locality Neck home
Locality Nierstein B420
Locality Oppenheim
Locality Guntersblum
Independent city of Worms
Locality Rheindürkheim
Railroad Crossing Osthofen – Rheindürkheim – Guntersblum railway line
Locality Worms B47
Start of expressway Beginning of the motor road
Independent city of Frankenthal (Palatinate)
Junction Frankenthal / Mörsch
Independent city of Ludwigshafen am Rhein
node (23)  Ludwigshafen -NorthA6 E50
Junction Ludwigshafen-Pfingstweide
Independent city of Frankenthal (Palatinate)
Junction Frankenthal / center
Junction Frankenthal Studernheim
Junction Symbol: UpLudwigshafen- Oggersheim
District-free city of Ludwigshafen
Junction Oggersheim Maxdorf
node (7)  Oggersheimer Cross A650
Rhine-Palatinate District
node (5)  Triangle Ludwigshafen-Süd A65
Junction Ludwigshafen-Maudach
District-free city of Ludwigshafen
Junction Mother city
node Rheingönheimer Cross B44
Rhine-Palatinate District
Junction Limburgerhof - Neuhofen
Junction Schifferstadt -North
Junction Forest lake
Independent city of Speyer
Junction Otterstadt
node (63)  Speyer A61 E31
Junction Speyer-West
Junction Speyer-Dudenhofen B39
Junction Speyer-South B39
Rhine-Palatinate District
Junction Dudenhofen / Römerberg
District of Germersheim
Junction Schwegenheim B272
Junction Lingenfeld
Junction Germersheim -NorthB35
Junction Germersheim-Center
Junction Germersheim-South
Junction Bellheim -North
Junction Bellheim South
Junction Rülzheim -North
Junction Rülzheim-South
Junction Rheinzabern
Junction Rheinzabern-Wiesenweg (temporary connection)
Junction Jockgrim
Junction Wörth- Mercedes-Benz Gate 1
Junction Wörth am Rhein- Mitte
node (3)  Worth Cross A65 B10
Expressway end Autobahn beginning replaced by A65
Junction (23)  Kandel - SouthA65
Locality Langenberg
Bypass Neulauterburg bypass 
flow volume up
EU border crossing Border crossing Bienwald ( DE ) - Lauterbourg ( FR )
France Continue on  N 363 A35Strasbourg
  • Under construction
  • In planning
  • Traffic control system
  • The federal road 9 (abbreviation: B 9 ) leads in western Germany from Kranenburg in the Kleve district on the Dutch border to Lauterbourg on the Palatinate - French border. For long stretches the road follows the imperial main roads of the Middle Ages via Cologne , Bonn , Koblenz , Mainz , Worms and Speyer to Strasbourg , which for their part largely have Roman origins ( Rheintalstraße ).

    course

    Europabrücke in Koblenz
    Oggersheimer Cross
    Aerial view of the B 9 along the Rhine near Laubenheim

    The B 9 runs directly from the Dutch border crossing at Nijmegen for 57 kilometers, always near the border through the cities of Kleve , Goch , Kevelaer to Geldern . There it moves further away from the Dutch border and leads past Kerken and Hüls to the south of Krefeld . On the southern outskirts of Krefeld there is a connection to the A 44 (junction Fichtenhain). The further section between Meerbusch - Osterath and Düsseldorf - Heerdt (junction Büderich) (ten kilometers) was divided into several state roads in January 2008 due to the parallel A 57 .

    From the Neuss-Norf junction of the A 57, the B 9 continues and runs from here always on the left bank of the Rhine through Germany, first to Cologne (144 km). From there to Bonn (172 km) it has been replaced by the 555 federal motorway . The old B 9 is called L 300. In Bonn, the B 9 begins again at Bertha-von-Suttner-Platz and heads south and crosses under Bonn- Bad Godesberg with the Bad Godesberg tunnel .

    The sections from Remagen to Bad Breisig and from Brohl to Koblenz are built like a motorway. In Koblenz it crosses over the Europe Bridge , the Mosel and represents the busiest and most important north-south axis represents the city. From Koblenz leads them with views of the right bank castles and vineyards by the UNESCO World Heritage Upper Middle Rhine Valley about Boppard , Sankt Goar and Oberwesel to Bingen am Rhein (297 km). From Bingen to Mainz it has been replaced by the Federal Highway 60 for around 35 km . From Mainz you continue on the left bank of the Rhine to the old imperial city of Worms (364 km) and via Ludwigshafen am Rhein to the next old imperial city of Speyer (395 km). The route continues via Germersheim , past the junction B 35 , Wörth am Rhein and Kandel to the state border at Lauterbourg . At Schwegenheim the B 272 branches off to Landau in the Palatinate . At Lauterbourg, the French A 35 motorway connects through Alsace to Strasbourg .

    From Worms the road is extended to four lanes continuously to Wörth am Rhein. Between Wörth and Kandel, federal highway 9 has been replaced by federal highway 65 .

    The Krahnenberg Bridge near Andernach , built in the 1960s, was extensively renovated by 2014.

    The total length of the federal highway 9 is around 450 kilometers.

    history

    Previous routes and names

    The Basel-Nijmegen road was declared route impériale no.86 on December 16, 1811 . After 1815, the Rhineland was divided into various German states , while Alsace remained French. The following state roads existed in the Prussian Rhine Province :

    • the Cöln-Nymwegener state road and
    • the Cöln-Mainzer Staatsstrasse

    The Bavarian state roads in the Palatinate , which has been in Bavaria since 1815 , were numbered according to their starting point:

    • State road No. 129: Speyer - Germersheim - Kandel - Lauterburg
    • State road No. 131: Speyer - Worms

    In 1932 the long-distance road 9 (FVS 9) was introduced and from 1934 it was designated as Reichsstraße 9 (R 9).

    Before it was connected to the A 35 in France, the B 9 passed over to the N 68 in Lauterbourg , which was part of Reichsstraße 9 during the occupation of France in World War II .

    The old route of the B 9 between Bingen-Bingerbrück and Mainz is today a state road (L 419) except for the through-town of Bingen-Gaulsheim (Mainzer Straße). The section from Mainz to south of Nackenheim forms the L 431. North of Oppenheim it is initially a city street (Mainzer Straße); in the center of the village a short distance as Kreisstraße 44; To the south it then runs as K 40 to Guntersblum, where it is then a state road to Worms (L 39). From Worms to Frankenthal, the old B 9 bears the number L 523. In the Worms district, the street was given the additional name "Liebfrauenmilchstraße" in order to advertise the Liebfrauenmilch wine .

    A little south of the Frankenthal junction of the A 6, it then becomes the K 4; except in the city center, which is partially pedestrianized. From the center of Studernheim it does not have a number and is only passable for pedestrians and cyclists on the southern edge due to a railway line. On the south side of the railway line it then runs as K 11 to Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim center. From the southern edge of Oggersheim follow the K 6 and K 11 to Mutterstadt. From there it is again a state road (L 524 and L 533) until it meets today's B 9 again southeast of Limburgerhof at the Schifferstadt Nord junction.

    Route

    Cologne to Bonn

    Coming from the north (from Neuss) the B 9 reaches the northernmost suburb of Cologne directly on the Rhine: Worringen ; it borders directly on Dormagen . As Neusser Landstrasse , the road leads a few kilometers further south through the very village-like suburb of Fühlingen and then passes the districts of Chorweiler and Seeberg to the east . Shortly thereafter, further south, the A 1 is crossed, which can be seen as the outermost of the seven ring roads that surround Cologne on the left bank of the Rhine. After the junction with the military ring (the second ring road), the B 9 leads about 14 kilometers through the urban area of ​​Cologne: through the districts of Weidenpesch , Mauenheim , Nippes and the Agnesviertel to Ebertplatz ; The B 9 continues over the rings around Cologne city center until it meets the Rhine again in the southern part of the city. Just under three kilometers further south, the B 9 meets the military ring again, which it now follows for one and a half kilometers to its first end point at the Cologne distribution circle. There it meets the A 555 , via which the continuation of the B 9 in Bonn is reached.

    The route, which was valid until 1997, branches off 500 m in front of the distribution circle and runs as state road 300 through the districts of Rodenkirchen and Sürth until the road meets the Rhine again at Godorf Harbor . Via Wesseling , Widdig and Hersel you reach the northern city limits of Bonn after around 14 kilometers. Within the Bonn city area, the former federal road and today's state road runs on Kölnstrasse .

    Bonn / Bonn-Bad Godesberg

    North portal of the Bad Godesberg tunnel
    The Koblenzer Tor in Bonn, through which the B 9 leads.
    Friedrich-Ebert-Allee in Bonn

    In Bonn, the B 9 begins after its interruption by the L 300 at Bertha-von-Suttner-Platz . Up to the Koblenzer Tor , which belongs to the main university building , it bears the name Belderberg. The street section Belderberg was an avenue of poplars in the electoral era , also known locally as "Beller" or "Belder". The B 9 leads through the two gates of Koblenzer Tor over Adenauerallee towards Bundeskanzlerplatz .

    The section of the B 9 from Bundeskanzlerplatz to the Bad Godesberger junction with Elsässer Straße / Wurzerstraße , where the entrance to the Godesberg road tunnel is located, was also called the “diplomatic racecourse” at the time of Bonn as the federal capital , just like the A 555 . On this route, the B 9 bears the street names in the following order: Willy-Brandt-Allee , Helmut-Kohl-Allee , via Helmut-Schmidt-Platz ( trajectory node ) to Friedrich-Ebert-Allee (this is where the connection to Konrad is located -Adenauer-Brücke , the southernmost of the Bonn Rhine bridges, with the A 562 ) and Godesberger Allee .

    The background of the popular term "diplomatic race track" was the particularly high density of diplomatic missions from other countries in the districts that are on the B 9, as well as the permissible speed limit of 70 km / h on some inner-city sections of the B 9.

    In the area of ​​the federal quarter (formerly the government quarter ) in Bonn, the B 9 has had the urban planning surname Bundesallee (formerly government avenue ) since 1989 . The background to this nickname is that the B 9 has been extensively expanded in this area since the 1990s: Among other things, intersections were rebuilt, the lighting renewed, the tram tunnel extended, new rows of avenue trees and hedges planted and the cycle paths and sidewalks generously re-laid. The “ Museum Mile ” with the museums Bundeskunsthalle , Kunstmuseum , Haus der Geschichte and Museum Koenig is located along this federal avenue .

    From 2003 to 2011, the tram tunnel in the area of ​​the Museum Mile was again extended and the stops along the B 9 were renewed. First, the Olof-Palme-Allee stop was completed, which now dominates the end of the A 562 motorway .

    The B 9 has been running under the Bad Godesberg city center since 1999 on the main route of the Godesberg road tunnel , the southern end of which meets the outer section of Koblenzer Strasse. In the transition from Koblenzer Strasse to Mainzer Strasse , the B 9 crosses the DB railway line Cologne-Bonn-Koblenz-Mainz . The district of Mehlem received a straight bypass with Remagener Straße , which means that the B 9 no longer runs through the town center. When you pass the southern Bonn city limits, the B 9 crosses the state border with Rhineland-Palatinate .

    Koblenz to Bingen

    Bundesstrasse 9 between Bingen and Rheinstein Castle with a view of the Schweizerhaus
    Bundesstrasse 9 in Oberwesel

    In Koblenz , the B 9 crosses the Moselle over the Europabrücke and then meets the former Saarplatz; a roundabout that is bridged by the B 9 and tunneled under by the B 49 . It forms the most important north-south connection through the city in Koblenz and is one of the busiest roads in Germany. From the Europabrücke to the connection to the Südbrücke , the B 9 was expanded to four lanes in the 1980s and 1990s. The UNESCO World Heritage Upper Middle Rhine Valley stretches from Koblenz to Bingen am Rhein . The B 9 alternates with the Koblenz – Mainz railway line - in large sections directly on the banks of the Rhine - the villages of Koblenz-Stolzenfels , Rhens , Boppard , Sankt Goar , Oberwesel and Bingen am Rhein.

    In the second half of the 20th century, a number of bypasses were built for the localities on this section of Bundesstraße 9. Between 1956 and 1958 a bypass road was built for the two cities of Oberwesel and Bacharach. Ten years later, on December 9, 1968, the bypass, construction of which began in 1962, was completed for the then independent municipalities of Bad Salzig and Hirzenach . Since then, the B 9 has been running directly on the Rhine at these four locations. At the beginning of the 1990s, the B 9 was also relocated in the core city of Boppard. For this purpose, the south-west corner of the Roman fort and the station building, which is under monument protection , had to be demolished. However, this brought the city a suburb bypass . Coming from Koblenz, the street still leads directly into the city, but before the main train station and the city center are reached, the street is led to the new section, which runs through the city as a bypass between the medieval Boppard city wall and the railway track .

    State of development

    The development of the B 9 is structured as follows:

    section Stripes Dividing strip comment
    N325Border crossing Wyler - A57Goch-West 2 No  
    A57Goch-Ost - B509Krefeld 2 No  
    City of Krefeld 4th Yes urban
    B57Krefeld - A44Osterath 2 No  
    A57 Neuss-Norf - Cologne trinkets 2 No  
    Köln-Nippes - A555Cologne distribution group 4th Yes urban
    A565 Bonn center - Bonn-Mehlem 4th Yes urban
    Bonn-Mehlem - B266Remagen 2 No  
    B266 Remagen - Bad Breisig 4th Yes motorway-like
    Bad Breisig - Brohl-Lützing 2 No  
    Brohl-Lützing - B416Koblenz 4th Yes motorway-like
    City of Koblenz 4th Yes urban
    B327Koblenz - B48Bingen am Rhein 2 No  
    B48Bingen am Rhein - A60Bingen-Ost 4th Yes motorway-like
    A60 Mainz-Laubenheim - Nackenheim 4th Yes motorway-like
    Nackenheim - B47Worms 2 No  
    B47Worms - L 523 Worms 4th Yes urban
    L 523 Worms - Wörther CrossA65 4th Yes motorway-like
    A65Kandel-Süd - L 545 Scheibenhardt 2 No  
    L 545 Scheibenhardt -A35Bienwald border crossing 4th Yes motorway-like

    Truck toll

    The federal road between Mainz and Worms has been closed to heavy transit traffic for a length of approx. 30 km since May 31, 2005 in order to prevent truck drivers from using this road to bypass the truck toll . This lock was the first of its kind in Germany. The aim is to force transit traffic to use the 61 and 63 motorways in this area .

    Since January 1, 2007, the MautStrAusdehnV has made the 10.8-kilometer two-lane route from the Kandel-Süd junction to the Bienwald border crossing a toll.

    Since August 1, 2012, the Federal Trunk Road Toll Act has also included the sections Brohl to Koblenz (22.8 kilometers), Mainz-Laubenheim to Nackenheim (6.5 kilometers) and Ludwigshafen-Pfingstweide to Autobahn 65 at Wörther Kreuz (66.2 kilometers) toll for trucks .

    This means that the entire route from Ludwigshafen to the border is now subject to the toll.

    A total of 106.3 kilometers are subject to tolls, which corresponds to almost a quarter (23.6%) of the total length of 450 kilometers.

    See also

    Web links

    Commons : Bundesstrasse 9  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

    Individual evidence

    1. Official Journal for Düsseldorf District (PDF). (PDF) December 20, 2012, accessed June 15, 2015 .
    2. a b c Cologne administrative district (ed.): Official journal of the Cologne administrative district . Cologne June 23, 1997 (Volume 177, No. 25). , Reference by printed matter 9701172 of the city of Bonn "Reclassification of federal roads , here: gradation of the B9 to the L300"
    3. Bridge renovation: traffic on the B9 runs in two lanes. Rhein-Zeitung, 23 August 2010, accessed on 7 December 2011 (newspaper article).
    4. List des routes impériales 51 à 100. Accessed December 7, 2011 (French).
    5. Post's advertising stamp; Mettenheim from May 11, 1958
    6. Maximilian Mühlens: Inauguration of Helmut-Kohl-Allee at B9 - Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer is committed to Bonn. In: General-Anzeiger . August 15, 2019, accessed August 16, 2019 .
    7. ^ City of Bonn: Expansion of Friedrich-Ebert-Allee completed two months earlier. Basic decision on the B 9 in 1989. Press releases from the City of Bonn, March 13, 2015, accessed on March 14, 2015 .
    8. ↑ The new line is released in 1968. Retrieved on December 7, 2011 (memories at www.bad-salzig-am-rhein.de).
    9. First federal road closed for toll evaders. faz.net, May 31, 2005, accessed July 23, 2019 .
    10. Truck tolls on five federal highways in Rhineland-Palatinate should start in August ( Memento from November 11, 2012 in the Internet Archive ); in Rhein Main Presse on February 15, 2012, current toll table