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Transport in Andorra

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Andorra is a landlocked country in Europe, which lies betweenFrance andSpain, whose transport infrastructure is primarily road provision.

Railways

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A train at Latour-de-Carol, one of the two stations serving Andorra

Andorra has no railways, and never had, although the line connectingLatour-de-Carol andToulouse, which in turn connects to France'sTGVs at Toulouse, runs within 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) of the Andorran border. One station in France is connected by bus toAndorra la VellaL'Hospitalet-près-l'Andorre (served by theSNCF). A bus service used to run to Latour-de-Carol, served by both SNCF's line to Toulouse and Spain's (Renfe's) line toBarcelona.[1][2]

A new public transport system, "Metro Aeri", was proposed by the government in 2004, but has not been built. It would have been an elevated cable metro system that would glide above the city's river.[3]

Roads

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CG-2, a major road in Andorra

Andorra has a network of roads, with a total length of 269 km (167 mi), of which 198 km (123 mi) are paved, leaving 71 km (44 mi) of unpaved road. The main road to the north (France) goes through the Envalira pass, which is 2,409 metres (7,904 ft) high but nevertheless open all year round as it has a tunnel as well. The two main roads out ofAndorra la Vella are the CG-1 to the Spanish border, and the CG-2 to the French border via theEnvalira Tunnel nearPas de la Casa.[4] In winter, the main roads in Andorra are usually quickly cleared of snow and remain accessible, but the main road out of Andorra on the French side (RN-20 on the French side and CG-2 on the Andorran side) is less frequently cleared and is sometimes closed by avalanches.[5] Other main roads out of Andorra la Vella are the CG-3 and CG-4 toArcalis andPal, respectively.

Bus services cover all metropolitan areas and many rural communities, with services on most major routes running half-hourly or more frequently during peak travel times. There are frequent long-distance bus services from Andorra toBarcelona andBarcelona Airport, and also toToulouse andToulouse Airport, in each case taking approximately 3 hours. Bus routes also serveGirona Airport and Portugal viaLleida. Bus services are mostly run by private companies, but some local ones are operated by the government. The private bus companies are Autocars Nadal, Camino Bus, Cooperativa Interurbana Andorrana, Eurolines, Hispano Andorrana, and Novatel.[6]

Airways

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Main article:Andorra–La Seu d'Urgell Airport

There are no airports for fixed-wing aircraft within Andorra's borders but there are, however, heliports inLa Massana (Camí Heliport),Arinsal andEscaldes–Engordany with commercial helicopter services.[7][8]

Nearby airports located in Spain and France provide access to international flights for the Principality. There is an airport located in the neighbouring Catalan comarca ofAlt Urgell, 12 km south of the Andorran-Spanish border, namedAndorra–La Seu d'Urgell Airport.[9] Starting July 2015 it has operated commercial flights toMadrid andPalma de Mallorca, and as of September 2022 flight are operated to Madrid byIberia Regional.

The nearest other airports are atPerpignan, France (156 km from Andorra) andLleida, Spain (160 km from Andorra). The largest nearby airports are atToulouse, France (165 km from Andorra) andBarcelona, Spain (215 km from Andorra). There are hourly bus services from both the Barcelona and Toulouse airports to Andorra.

See also

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References

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Public Domain This article incorporatespublic domain material fromThe World Factbook (2025 ed.).CIA. (Archived 2000 edition.)

  1. ^SNCF Map
  2. ^Google map
  3. ^"La construcció del metro aeri d'Andorra no començarà abans que s'acabi aquesta legislatura - Europa Press - VilaWeb". 2010-11-04. Retrieved2010-11-04.
  4. ^Agència de Mobilitat, Govern d'AndorraArchived 2013-03-17 at theNational and University Library of Iceland
  5. ^L'Hospitalet. La RN 20 coupée à cause d'une avalanche,La Depeche, 17 December 2008.Ladepeche.fr(in French)
  6. ^Public transport of passengersArchived 2012-05-26 atarchive.today, Servei de Planificació i Gestió del Transport, Govern d'Andorra, 2009.
  7. ^"Inici - Heliand - Helicopters a Andorra". Heliand. Retrieved2015-05-14.
  8. ^"Untitled Document".www.helitrans.ad. Archived fromthe original on July 15, 2009. RetrievedAugust 24, 2024.
  9. ^"Public and regional airport of Andorra-la Seu d'Urgell". Archived fromthe original on 2016-03-28. Retrieved2016-03-18.

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