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E1 and E2 Expressway |
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|---|---|
PLUS Expressway Berhad |
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| Length | Total length 966 kilometres (600 miles) Bukit Kayu Hitam - Bukit Lanjan 456 kilometres (283 miles) Sungai Besi - Johor Bahru 310 kilometres (192 miles) |
| Direction | North→South |
| Start | Bukit Kayu Hitam, Kedah |
| Main destinations | Jitra Alor Star Sungai Petani Butterworth Taiping Kuala Kangsar Ipoh Gopeng Tapah Tanjung Malim Rawang Kuala Lumpur Seremban Alor Gajah Melaka Yong Peng Ayer Hitam Skudai Johor Bahru |
| End | Johor Bahru, Johor |
| Construction dates | 1982 - 1994 |
| Road/Expressway joined | |
| Asian Highway Network | AH 2 |
| Technical specifications | |
| Number of lanes | 4 lanes Bukit Kayu Hitam - Sungai Dua Penang Bridge - Slim River Ayer Keroh - Johor Bahru 6 lane Sungai Dua - Penang Bridge Slim River - Bukit Lanjan Sungai Besi - Ayer Keroh |
| Interchanges | 75 |
| Toll plazas | 65 |
| P Layby | [citation needed] |
| R&R Rest and Service Area | [citation needed] |
| R&R Overhead Bridge Restaurant | 2 |
| V Vista Point | 3 |
| Highway tunnels | 1 |
| Type of roads | Tarmac Concrete |
| Toll systems | Closed toll system |
| Highway patrol unit | PLUSRONDA |
| Hotline service | PLUSLINE |
| Maps | |
The North-South Expressway (NSE) (Malay: Lebuhraya Utara-Selatan) is the longest expressway in Malaysia with the total length of 966 km (600 miles) running from Bukit Kayu Hitam in Kedah near the Malaysian-Thai border (connects with Phetkasem Road (Route 4) in Thailand) to Johor Bahru at the southern portion of Peninsular Malaysia. The expressway links many major cities and towns in western Peninsular Malaysia, acting as the 'backbone' of the west coast of the peninsula. It is also known as PLUS Expressway, named after the highway's concessionaire, Projek Lebuhraya Utara Selatan Berhad (North South Expressway Project; abbreviated as PLUS).
This expressway passes through 7 states on the peninsula: Johor, Malacca, Negeri Sembilan, Selangor, Perak, Penang and Kedah. It provides a faster alternative to the old Federal Route
, thus reducing travelling time between various towns & cities.
Contents |
Overview
It is divided into a few main routes;
(
Penang Bridge,
(
route, starts from Bukit Raja, Klang to Jalan Duta exit in Kuala Lumpur. The
, opened in 1997, is a highway built to bypass Kuala Lumpur. It starts from the Shah Alam interchange on the NKVE
, past Subang Jaya, Putrajaya and Kuala Lumpur International Airport, and ends at the Nilai Utara interchange on the
. The
is the Second Link Expressway (Linkedua), which is connected to Malaysia-Singapore Second Link, starting at Senai Airport and ends in Tanjung Kupang before crossing. PLUS also obtained the
, which starts at Mambau in Seremban with an interchange at Lukut and ending near the town centre in Port Dickson.
and
end in Kuala Lumpur. The
from the North becomes the New Klang Valley Expressway which further links into the NSE Central Link or for people travelling to Kuala Lumpur exit at the Jalan Duta Toll Plaza which links to the Sprint Expressway
and the Kuala Lumpur Middle Ring Road 1 (MRR1)
. The
from the South ends in Sungai Besi which then changes into the
via
, Sungai Besi Expressway
and heads towards the city centre.
History
The planning of the national expressway started in the mid-1970s. In 1977, the Malaysian Ministry of Works received official instructions to draw plans of an expressway from the Malaysia-Thailand border (Bukit Kayu Hitam) to the
At that time, all construction works of the expressway between 1982 to 1988 was solely administered by Malaysian Highway Authority before being transferred to Projek Lebuhraya Utara-Selatan Berhad (PLUS) in 1988. As the construction works continued, segments of the highway were opened to traffic as they were finished to help fund the construction works. PLUS continued all the construction works from 1988 until completion in 1994, 15 months earlier than scheduled. The expressway was officially opened on September 8, 1994 by Malaysian prime minister at that time, Tun Dr. Mahathir bin Mohamad.
Pioneer routes
The pioneer route for
, opened in 1 April 1985.
The pioneer route for
Current developments
Six-lane widing works
Recently, plans to upgrade the stretches from Slim River to Tanjung Malim, Tanjung Malim to Rawang (
Kuala Lumpur-Penang Through Traffic (Ipoh North (Jelapang) - Ipoh South)
The Jelapang and Ipoh South toll plazas would be demolished in 2009 to make a non-stop route across Ipoh. The decision to demolish both toll plazas was made as a result of accidents which happened at Jelapang toll plaza. Since the toll plaza was opened in 28 September 1987, there were many accident cases which involved brake failure in heavy vehicles due to hard braking when proceeding downhill to the toll plaza. On 7 June 2008, the new Ipoh North toll plaza (South bound) replacing old Jelapang toll plaza opened to traffic, followed by north bound on 15 August 2008. Beginning 11:00 am on 14 July 2009, the Kuala Lumpur-Penang through traffic is now opened to traffic. With the opening of the 14.7 kilometre (9.1 miles) between Ipoh North (Jelapang) and Ipoh South stretch, highway users are no longer required to stop for toll transactions at the Ipoh North and Ipoh South Toll Plazas.
Highways of PLUS
and
(both AH 2): North-South Expressway (NSE)
: North-South Expressway Central Link (NSECL/ELITE)
: Second Link Expressway (MSSC/LINKEDUA)
: Seremban-Port Dickson Highway (SPDH)
: New Klang Valley Expressway (Part of NSE)
AH 2: Skudai Highway (until 1 March 2004 only) and Johor-Singapore Causeway
: Federal Highway Route 2 (FHR2)
Carriageways
Generally the expressway consists of 4 lanes, 2 for each direction. There are some exceptions to this; the following are stretches with 6 lanes (3 each way):
North-South Expressway Southern Route (Sungai Besi to Ayer Keroh)- New Klang Valley Expressway
North-South Expressway Northern Route (Slim River to Slim River)North-South Expressway Northern Route (Sungai Dua to Juru located at Penang)North-South Expressway Central Link , (Shah Alam to Nilai North)- Second Link Expressway (Senai Airport to Ayer Rajah Expressway (Tuas,Singapore))
Speed limit
North-South Expressway is designed as a high-speed long distance expressway therefore the default speed limit on the North-South Expressway is 110 km/h (68 mph) , but there are some exceptions in some places for several reasons, including:-
- 1 km before every toll plaza: 60km/h (to help the traffic to slow down)
- Bukit Kayu Hitam-Jitra stretch : 90 km/h (expressway section with at-grade junctions) (Kedah)
- Sungai Dua-Juru : 90 km/h (due to heavy traffic at Penang Bridge) (Penang)
- Kuala Kangsar-Jelapang stretch : 80 km/h (highland stretch with dangerous corners) (Perak)
- Gua Tempurung stretch : 90 km/h (highland stretch) (Perak)
- Bukit Lanjan Interchange : 80 km/h (to control traffic flow of NKVE and the main link of
northern route to avoid accidents) (Selangor) - Bukit Lanjan-Jalan Duta stretch : 90 km/h (steep uphill/downhill stretch) (Kuala Lumpur)
- Sungai Besi-Bangi : 90 km/h (due to high traffic capacity) (Kuala Lumpur- Selangor)
Notable incidents
- On March 9, 2007, 6 passengers were killed in a bus crash near Menora Tunnel, Perak.
- On August 13, 2007, 20 people were killed in a bus crash near Changkat Jering, Perak.
- On March 27, 2008, Singaporean family of 4 killed in accident along North-South Expressway near Tangkak, Johor, leaving behind a 2-month-old baby.
- On December 2, 2008 at about 0315 hrs, a Singapore biker, who was returning from a riding trip from Hat Yai, Thailand was killed after crashing his bike into an overturned lorry near Simpang Empat, Malacca.
- On December 7, 2008, 10 passengers were killed in a bus crash at km 146.8 of the North-South Expressway between Tangkak and Pagoh, Johor.
- On 13 April 2009, Six people were killed in double decker express bus crash at km 443 of the North-South Expressway near Rawang, Selangor.
Measures taken to reduce accidents
Most heavy vehicles are only allowed to travel 80-90 km/h by law. Considering that two lanes are inadequate for smooth traffic flow, the expressway is being widened as a result of the increasing number of fatal accidents along this highway.
It has been recently decided that the two-lane 110 km/h highway will be upgraded to a three-lane 110 km/h highway. The highway widening project has been underway since 2006 as an accident-reducing measure.
Toll system
The North-South Expressway is a toll expressway with two toll systems:-
- Open system - Users only have to pay at certain toll plazas within the open system range for a fixed amount. "Open system" is used in the following stretches of the North-South expressway:
- Batu Tiga and Sungai Rasau, (Selangor)
- Bukit Kayu Hitam, (Kedah)
- Jitra, (Kedah)
- Kempas, (Johor)
Johor-Singapore Causeway ,- Lukut and Mambau, (Negri Sembilan)
- Tanjung Kupang, Taman Perling and Lima Kedai (Johor).
- Closed system - Users collect toll tickets before entering the expressway at respective toll plazas and pay an amount of toll at the exit toll plaza plus the distance from the plaza to the Limit of Maintenance Responsibility (LMR).
PLUS Travel Incentive Program
Effective 1 January 2009, Class 1 highway users traveling on the North-South Expressway (NSE) and
There are three toll incentive packages of the PLUS Travel Incentive Program which will be enjoyed by the customers on the PLUS and ELITE highways which are:-
Incentive One
- Users of Class 1 vehicles using the highway between 12:00 midnight and 7:00 am will enjoy 10 percent toll discount.
- Duration : 1 January 2009 until 31 December 2010.
Incentive Two
- Additional 10 percent toll discount will be given to highway users (Class 1 vehicles only) traveling between 12.00 midnight to 7.00 am on selected six days during Hari Raya Aidilfitri, Chinese New Year, Deepavali and Christmas festive seasons.
- Duration : 1 January 2009 until 31 December 2010.
Incentive Three
- Electronic Toll Payment users spending monthly cummulative minimum amount of RM200 will enjoy 5 percent rebate (for usage on PLUS and ELITE highways only)
- This offer is given to users who are registered with the PLUS Loyalty Program which will be launched later.
- Duration : Beginning 1 January 2009
Toll rate classes for every PLUS Expressways Networks
| Class | Type of vehicles | Payment | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | Motorcycles, bicycles or vehicles with 2 or less wheels | Free | Except Tanjung Kupang toll plaza on the Malaysia-Singapore Second Link |
| 1 | Vehicles with 2 axles and 3 or 4 wheels excluding taxis | RM (Cash) TnG TAG | |
| 2 | Vehicles with 2 axles and 5 or 6 wheels excluding buses | RM (Cash) TnG TAG | |
| 3 | Vehicles with 3 or more axles | RM (Cash) | Cash only |
| 4 | Taxis | RM (Cash) | Cash only, paid by passengers only. |
| 5 | Buses | RM (Cash) | Cash only |
Toll Abbreviation
- For toll rates, see also
Toll rates of the North-South Expressway
| Abbreviation | Exits | Name of Interchanges |
|---|---|---|
| AHT | EXIT 244 | Ayer Hitam |
| AKH | EXIT 231 | Ayer Keroh |
| ASS | EXIT 177 | Alor Setar Selatan |
| ASU | EXIT 178 | Alor Setar Utara |
| BBR | EXIT 153 | Bandar Baharu |
| BDR | EXIT 130 | Bidor |
| BGS | EXIT 212 | Bangi |
| BKB | EXIT 118 | Bukit Beruntung |
| BKH | EXIT 185 | Bukit Kayu Hitam |
| BKM | EXIT 150 | Bukit Merah |
| BKR | EXIT 101 | Bukit Raja |
| BRG | EXIT 124 | Behrang |
| BRT | EXIT 166 | Bertam |
| BSP | EXIT 606 | Bandar Saujana Putra |
| BTS | EXIT 158 | Bukit Tambun Selatan |
| BTU | EXIT 158 | Bukit Tambun Utara |
| BTT | Batu Tiga | |
| BTR | EXIT 119 | Bukit Tagar |
| CKJ | EXIT 146 | Changkat Jering |
| DMR | EXIT 106 | Damansara |
| EBN | EXIT 602 | Ebor Utara |
| EBS | EXIT 602 | Ebor Selatan |
| GPG | EXIT 135 | Gopeng |
| GRN | EXIT 173 | Gurun |
| HKG | Hutan Kampung | |
| HSB | EXIT 114 | Hospital Sungai Buloh |
| IPU | EXIT 141 | Ipoh North |
| IPS | EXIT 139 | Ipoh South |
| JBC | ||
| JLD | EXIT 111 | Jalan Duta |
| JRU | EXIT 160 | Juru |
| JSN | EXIT 233 | |
| JTR | EXIT 182 | Jitra |
| JWI | EXIT 156 | Jawi |
| KDR | EXIT 107 | Kota Damansara |
| KJG | EXIT 210 | Kajang |
| KKS | EXIT 143 | Kuala Kangsar |
| KLA | EXIT 608 | KLIA Airport |
| KLI | EXIT 252 | |
| KPS | EXIT 255 | Kempas |
| LBB | EXIT 120 | Lembah Beringin |
| LKT | EXIT 2903A/B | Lukut |
| MAC | EXIT 245 | Machap |
| MBU | EXIT 2901 | Mambau |
| NLI | EXIT 215 | Nilai |
| PBSB | EXIT 161 | Penang Bridge |
| PDG | EXIT 175 | Pendang |
| PDN | EXIT 219A | Port Dickson Utara |
| PDS | EXIT 219B | Port Dickson Selatan |
| PGH | EXIT 238 | Pagoh |
| PLI | EXIT 223 | Pedas Linggi |
| PPM | EXIT 213 | Putra Mahkota |
| PSR | EXIT 126 | Slim River |
| PTH | EXIT 605 | Putra Heights |
| PTJ | EXIT 607 | Putrajaya |
| RAW | EXIT 116 | Rawang |
| RWS | EXIT 115 | Rawang Selatan |
| SAT | EXIT 227 | Simpang Ampat |
| SBG | EXIT 104 | Subang |
| SBI | Sungai Besi | |
| SBN | EXIT 218 | Seremban |
| SDK | EXIT 250 | Sedenak |
| SEA | EXIT 603 | Seafield |
| SGB | EXIT 113 | Sungai Buloh |
| SGD | EXIT 165 | Sungai Dua |
| SGR | Sungai Rasau | |
| SHA | EXIT 103/601 | Shah Alam |
| SKD | EXIT 254 | Skudai |
| SKI | EXIT 128 | Sungkai |
| SNU | EXIT 253 | Senai Utara |
| SPP | EXIT 137 | Simpang Pulai |
| SPR | EXIT 247 | Simpang Renggam |
| SPS | EXIT 168 | Sungai Petani Selatan |
| SPU | EXIT 170 | Sungai Petani Utara |
| STA | EXIT 244 | Setia Alam |
| SWG | EXIT 220 | |
| TGK | EXIT 235 | Tangkak |
| TGM | EXIT 121 | Tanjung Malim |
| TPH | EXIT 132 | Tapah |
| TPU | EXIT 148 | Taiping Utara |
| TBN | EXIT 138 | Tambun |
| TLK | Tol Lima Kedai | |
| TTK | Tol Tanjung Kupang | |
| TTP | Tol Taman Perling | |
| UPM | EXIT 209 | Universiti Putra Malaysia |
| USJ | EXIT 604 | USJ Subang Jaya |
| YPS | EXIT 242 | Yong Peng Selatan |
| YPU | EXIT 241 | Yong Peng Utara |
- (Source: PLUS Expressway Berhad)
- For more information see also
Toll rates of the North-South Expressway
Facilities along the expressway
- Rest and service areas located about 60 km from each other
- Layby parking areas located about every 2 toll plazas
- Overhead restaurants at Ayer Keroh, Sungai Buloh and USJ.
- Emergency phones every 2 km
- PLUSLINE hotline number
- PLUS Ronda (PLUS patrol) service to assist drivers in the event of vehicle problems on the expressway
- PLUS helicopter patrol unit to monitored along PLUS expressways
General facts about the expressway
- North-South Expressway is Malaysia's first long-distance expressway as well as Malaysia's longest expressway.
- Menora Tunnel, an 800 m (2625 ft) tunnel on the North-South Expressway Northern Route near Jelapang, was once Malaysia's longest highway tunnel at the time of its construction.
- Sungai Besi toll plaza is the widest toll plaza in Malaysia with over 18 lanes (excluding additional toll booths).
- The longest bridge along the expressway is Sungai Perak Bridge (Jambatan Sultan Azlan Shah) with the length of 300 m (984 ft).
- North-South Expressway is the first expressway in Malaysia that provides overhead bridge restaurants.
- The longest flyover bridge along the NSE network is Batu Tiga flyover in the North-South Expressway Central Link.
- The most expensive section of the expressway is the Gopeng-Tapah section. At RM200 million, it translate to RM 20 million per kilometre. Embankment strengthening is the major contributor for this escalating cost.
- The ELITE Speedway in USJ Rest and Service Area on
North-South Expressway Central Link is the first highway go-kart circuit in Malaysia. - North-South Expressway forms 80% of Malaysian part of the Asian Highway Network, specifically Asian Highway Network 2 AH 2. The other expressways in Malaysia included in the route are Skudai Highway, Kuala Lumpur Middle Ring Road 1 and
Johor Causeway . - The Nilai Memorial Park near Nilai Layby on
North-South Expressway Southern Route is the first closed tolled expressway public memorial park in Malaysia. - Tapah RSA (both sides) in Perak is the first rest and service area to have wireless broadband internet facilities.
- The PLUS Art Gallery in Ayer Keroh Overhead Bridge Restaurant (OBR) is the first highway art gallery in Malaysia.
- Kempas Highway (Johor State Route
J3
) is the only state route ever built by an expressway concessionaire company (PLUS Expressway Berhad). - While more than 95% of the expressway is only accessible via interchanges, the section between Bukit Kayu Hitam and Jitra (both in Kedah) is accessible via at-grade junctions. It is due to the fact that the section itself is a part of Federal Route
. - By default, certain slow-moving vehicles such as bicycles, steam rollers, tractors, excavators and backhoes are not allowed to use the expressway; however, these vehicles are temporarily allowed to use the stretch between Juru and Sg. Dua (both in Penang) to enable them to use the Penang Bridge. These vehicles must exit the expressway via one of the interchanges within the stretch and use the federal roads instead to continue their travel.
- The Machap Rest and Service Area (north bound) at the
North-South Expressway Southern Route
is the first fully air-conditioned rest area in Malaysia, after it was renovated during mid-2008. - PLUSMiles is the first and only toll rebate loyalty programme in the Malaysian expressways.
- The longest closed toll collection system coverage in Malaysia is from Juru toll plaza to Skudai toll plaza (previously Ipoh South toll plaza to Skudai toll plaza), which runs through the
North-South Expressway Northern Route
, New Klang Valley Expressway
, North-South Expressway Central Link
and North-South Expressway Southern Route
. - The
North-South Expressway Northern Route
is the first and currently the only expressway in Malaysia to have a runaway truck ramp near Jelapang, Ipoh.
List of interchanges
- See also
AH 2 North-South Expressway Northern Route
AH 2 North-South Expressway Southern Route
New Klang Valley Expressway
North-South Expressway Central Link
Second Link Expressway
Seremban-Port Dickson Highway
Butterworth-Kulim Expressway
See also
External links
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