The Jerusalem Post

Public transporta­tion lane aims to ease Jerusalem traffic

- • By EYTAN HALON

The Ministry of Transporta­tion, the Jerusalem Municipali­ty and the Jerusalem Transporta­tion Master Plan Team have finalized plans to construct a public transporta­tion corridor along the capital’s Begin Boulevard.

The new lane aims to reduce traffic along one of the city’s key thoroughfa­res, giving priority to public transit, and will be constructe­d along the existing road shoulder. The boulevard will then be widened to include an additional hard shoulder.

The city’s Moriah Jerusalem Developmen­t Corporatio­n (MJDC) published a tender recently for the initial 2.5-km.long phase of the project. Once complete, the bus way will stretch for 18 km.

In addition to building and paving an additional lane, work will include the addition of traffic control and informatio­n signs, lighting and new safety barriers.

Initial work will be carried out southbound along Begin Boulevard between the Ben-Zion Netanyahu Interchang­e and the Golda Meir Interchang­e in Ramot.

“The Jerusalem Municipali­ty is determined to advance infrastruc­ture for public transporta­tion,” said Mayor Moshe Lion.

“The constructi­on of the public transporta­tion lane along Begin Boulevard will enable faster entry into Jerusalem from the north, and later from the south, for public transporta­tion passengers,” he said. “These projects join a series of other projects we are currently promoting throughout the city for the benefit of its residents and visitors. We will continue to advance the city’s infrastruc­ture for more efficient, ‘greener’ and more modern transporta­tion.”

Constructi­on work done by MJDC, estimated to commence by the end of this year, is expected to take 12 months and cost approximat­ely NIS 30 million. Temporary changes to traffic arrangemen­ts will be made along the route during constructi­on.

In July, Jerusalem authoritie­s shut one of the primary routes into the capital for an estimated three-year period. Shazar Boulevard, a major road entering Jerusalem from Route 1 at the city’s northwest edge, will be blocked for all private vehicles from the Chords Bridge to the corner of Nordau Street until 2022.

The closure is part of the second stage of the Jerusalem Gateway Project, an ambitious plan to turn the city entrance into one of the country’s leading business hubs.

Most traffic entering the city has been redirected to Yitzhak Rabin Boulevard, which was widened ahead of the closure. Public transporta­tion is continuing along Shazar Boulevard as usual, unaffected by the constructi­on and tunneling work.

 ?? (Jerusalem Transporta­tion Master Plan Team) ?? A RENDITION of the new public transporta­tion lane along Jerusalem’s Begin Boulevard.
(Jerusalem Transporta­tion Master Plan Team) A RENDITION of the new public transporta­tion lane along Jerusalem’s Begin Boulevard.

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