Mexican Federal Highway 45D

Federal Highway 45D (Spanish: Carretera Federal 45D, Fed. 45D) is a toll part of the paralleling Fed. 45. Eleven separate tolled segments exist of Fed. 45D between Querétaro City and Villa Ahumada in Chihuahua, between Chihuahua City and Ciudad Juárez.

Federal Highway 45D
Carretera Federal 45D
Highway system
Mexican Federal Highways
List  Autopistas

Querétaro-Irapuato

Autopista Querétaro-Irapuato
Location Fed. 45 / Fed. 57 in Querétaro City to Fed. 90 in Irapuato, Guanajuato
Length104.7 km[1] (65.1 mi)

The toll road between Querétaro and Irapuato is the oldest to bear the Fed. 45D designation, opening on February 12, 1962. It is operated by Caminos y Puentes Federales, which charges cars 136 pesos to travel the full length of Fed. 45D.[2] East of Salamanca, it meets an interchange that marks the northern terminus of Fed. 43D (Morelia-Salamanca) and the southern terminus of the Salamanca-León highway, also designated Fed. 45D.

Salamanca-León

Autopista Salamanca–León
Location Fed. 45D / Fed. 43D in Cerro Gordo, Guanajuato to León, Guanajuato
Length79 km[3] (49 mi)

The Salamanca-León highway picks up where Fed. 43D leaves off at the interchange with the Querétaro-Irapuato highway east of Salamanca; a toll plaza, called Cerro Gordo, sits in the northeast corner of the interchange. It proceeds northwest past a toll plaza at Mendoza and toward another interchange with Fed. 45 north of the city of Irapuato, quickly followed by another with the city's Northwest Bypass, Fed. 20D. A portion of the routing of Fed. 43D here coincides with that originally built for Fed. I-20D. After this, the road veers back northwest, with one partially built spur immediately preceding the Puerta Interior toll plaza, before ending at Fed. 45D on the southeast edge of the León metro. A connection into the León metropolitan street system at Bulevar Delta was under construction and expected to open in early 2017.[4]

The 79-kilometre (49 mi) Salamanca-León segment formally opened on September 21, 2015 with a dedication ceremony by President Enrique Peña Nieto. It cost 3.45 billion pesos and is estimated to carry 9,450 cars a day.[5] It is maintained by Grupo México subsidiary[4] Concesionaria Infraestructura del Bajío, S.A. de C.V. and costs cars 43 pesos to drive.[3][5]

Segments of the Salamanca-León highway to be built include urban access to León and a spur to Puerta Interior.[6]

León-Aguascalientes

Autopista León–Aguascalientes
Location Fed. 45 in León, Guanajuato to Fed. 45 in Encarnación de Díaz, Jalisco
Length129.38 km[1] (80.39 mi)

The Autopista León-Aguascalientes, which opened on September 30, 1992, is operated by Red de Carreteras de Occidente (RCO) along with other highways in the Bajío region. RCO charges a toll of 267 peso for cars to use the entirety of the road.[7]

Cuauhtémoc-Osiris

Autopista Cuauhtémoc-Osiris
Location Fed. 45 in Cosío, Aguascalientes to Fed. 45 / SH 45D (Libramiento Noreste de Zacatecas) in Guadalupe, Zacatecas
Length58.11 km[8][9] (36.11 mi)

The only segment in Zacatecas not operated by the state government, CAPUFE charges 38 pesos to use the highway from Cuauhtémoc to Osiris, which provides much of the route between Aguascalientes and Zacatecas City.[2]

Libramiento de Víctor Rosales

Libramiento de Víctor Rosales
Location Fed. 45 in Víctor Rosales to Fed. 45 in Enrique Estrada
Length12.2 km[9] (7.6 mi)

The Libramiento de Víctor Rosales, which opened on October 8, 1991, bypasses the towns of Víctor Rosales and Enrique Estrada. Its concession is held by Infraestructura Concesionada de Irapuato, S.A. de C.V., but operations are managed by the state government, which charges a toll of 20 pesos.[10]

Libramiento de Fresnillo

Libramiento de Fresnillo
Location Fed. 45 south of Fresnillo to Fed. 45 north of Fresnillo
Length20.05 km[9] (12.46 mi)

The bypass of Fresnillo is owned and operated by the government of Zacatecas, with a toll of 35 pesos for cars; it opened on March 8, 1993.[11]

Autopista Jiménez-Camargo

Autopista Jiménez-Camargo
Location Fed. 45 / Fed. 49 in Jiménez to Fed. 45 / SH 30 / SH 69 in Camargo
Length68.98 km[12] (42.86 mi)

The state government of Chihuahua operates the Autopista Jiménez-Camargo, with its free alternative being Highway 69, and opened on May 15, 1990. A toll of 85 pesos is charged for cars to use the road.[13]

Autopista Camargo-Delicias

Autopista Camargo-Delicias
Location Fed. 45 north of Camargo to Fed. 45 in Delicias
Length69.02 km[12] (42.89 mi)

The Autopista Camargo-Delicias is also owned and operated by the Chihuahua state government, which charges cars a toll of 124 pesos over two toll booths, at Altavista and Saucillo.[14]

Libramiento Oriente de Chihuahua

Libramiento Oriente de Chihuahua
Location Fed. 45 southeast of Chihuahua City to Fed. 45D near Sacramento
Length42.2 km[12] (26.2 mi)

The Chihuahua Eastern Bypass, providing an alternative to Fed. 45 through Chihuahua City, opened at 12:01 am on April 16, 2015.[15] It ends at Fed. 45D (Chihuahua-Sacramento).

From 2015 to 2017, it was operated by the state government, but it lost the concession with Banobras and, in the midst of a gubernatorial transition, could not hold on. On February 16, 2017, operations were taken over by Banobras, making it Chihuahua's only toll road not administered by the state government.[16] Banobras currently charges 58 pesos to use the road over two toll booths, one at either terminus.[17]

Chihuahua-Sacramento

Autopista Chihuahua-Sacramento
Location Fed. 45 near Chihuahua City to Fed. 45 in Sacramento
Length13.18 km[12] (8.19 mi)

The highway from Chihuahua to Sacramento is operated by the state government, with a toll of 62 pesos for cars.[18]

El Sueco-Villa Ahumada

Autopista El Sueco-Villa Ahumada
Location Fed. 45 in El Sueco to Fed. 45 in Villa Ahumada
Length83.63 km[12] (51.97 mi)

The Chihuahua state government operates the toll road between El Sueco and Villa Ahumada, the last on northbound Fed. 45 to Ciudad Juárez, and charges a toll of 164 pesos for its use.[19]

References

  1. Datos Viales - Guanajuato, SCT, 2017
  2. CAPUFE: Tarifas Vigentes as of January 31, 2017
  3. Tarifas Vigentes, SCT, accessed 15 February 2017
  4. Zamora, Rita (9 June 2016). "Entronque con autopista León – Salamanca estaría listo en 2017". Noticieros en Línea. Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  5. Rodríguez Canales, Adriana (21 September 2015). "Inauguran la autopista Salamanca-León". El Financiero. Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  6. Trinidad Méndez, José (21 August 2015). "'Olvidan' acceso a León en la nueva autopista". AM Querétaro. Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  7. SCT: Datos Operativos de las Vías - León-Aguascalientes
  8. "AVISO por el que se modifica la clasificación de las carreteras, previstas en el Apéndice referido en el artículo 6o. del Reglamento sobre el Peso, Dimensiones y Capacidad de los Vehículos de Autotransporte que Transitan en los Caminos y Puentes de Jurisdicción Federal, publicado el 26 de enero de 1994 y sus respectivas modificaciones.", DOF June 12, 2015
  9. Datos Viales - Zacatecas, SCT, 2017
  10. SCT: Datos Operativos de las Vías - Libramiento de Víctor Rosales
  11. SCT: Datos Operativos de las Vías - Libramiento de Fresnillo
  12. Datos Viales - Chihuahua, SCT, 2017
  13. SCT: Datos Operativos de las Vías - Autopista Jiménez-Camargo
  14. SCT: Datos Operativos de las Vías - Autopista Camargo-Delicias
  15. "Fijan costo de peaje para el libramiento Oriente". La Opción. 16 April 2015. Retrieved 6 April 2017.
  16. Piñón, David (12 February 2017). "Pierde Gobierno del Estado concesión de 450 mdp para el Libramiento Oriente". El Heraldo de Chihuahua. Retrieved 6 April 2017.
  17. Tarifas: Banobras/Libramiento Oriente de Chihuahua
  18. Carreteras Chihuahua - Tarifas
  19. SCT: Datos Operativos de las Vías - Autopista El Sueco-Villa Ahumada
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