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National Route 9 (Argentina)

National Route 9 (in Spanish, Ruta Nacional 9) is a major road in Argentina, which runs from the center-east to the northwest of the country, crossing the provinces of Buenos Aires, Santa Fe, Córdoba, Santiago del Estero, Tucumán, Salta and Jujuy. It starts on Avenida General Paz, which marks the border between the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires and the surrounding province of the same name, and ends at the Horacio Guzmán International Bridge, on the La Quiaca River, traversing 1,967 km (1,222 mi). The road is a limited access motorway from Buenos Aires to Rosario.

National Route 9
Ruta nacional 9
Route information
Length1,967 km (1,222 mi)
Major junctions
North endRoute 14 (Bolivia) at the Bolivian border at Horacio Guzmán International Bridge in La Quiaca
Major intersections, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
South end to Avenida Lugones
Location
CountryArgentina
Major citiesFlorida, Boulogne, Tortuguitas, Campana, Zárate, San Nicolás de los Arroyos, Empalme Villa Constitución, Rosario, Cañada de Gómez, Villa María, Córdoba, Jesús María, Santiago del Estero, San Miguel de Tucumán, Rosario de la Frontera, Metán, Salta, San Salvador de Jujuy, La Quiaca.[1]
Highway system

Between the cities of San Nicolás de los Arroyos and Rosario (distant about 65 km (40 mi) from each other), the road is named Teniente General Juan José Valle.

History

Beginnings

The route originated as the "Camino Real del Perú" (Royal Road of Peru), used since colonial times to travel from Buenos Aires, through Córdoba, Santiago del Estero, San Miguel de Tucumán, Salta, San Salvador de Jujuy, and Potosí, continuing to Perú. The section between Buenos Aires and the south of what it is today Cordoba Province, was shared with the "Camino Real del Oeste" (Royal Road of the West) which branched towards San Luis, Mendoza and Santiago (Chile). The road had a system of small inns and establishments every 30–50 km where travellers could rest.

After the coming of the railroad, in the second half of the 19th Century, this road lost relevance, as the railroad provided faster service on any type of weather. The first train from Buenos Aires arrived in the town of La Quiaca in Argentina's northern border with Bolivia on 30 December 1907.[2]

With the advent of the automobile, the Federal Government decided to build roads throughout the Republic. In 1936 the road from Buenos Aires to La Quiaca was named Ruta Nacional 9 (National Route 9). In 1943 the road was open to traffic in its full length, even though most of it was unpaved.

The road started competing against the railroad, taking passengers and cargo. The last passenger train to La Quiaca arrived in December 1993, and the last cargo train in July 1994.[2]

Pavement

The Buenos Aires to Rosario section was paved by 27 December 1936. The work reached Córdoba on 5 June 1937.[3] It should be mentioned that National Route 9 had a different layout in those days, as the road traversed through Pilar to Pergamino on the roadbed of today's National Route 8 and then it turned north going to Rosario.

The road between Congress Square (Plaza Congreso) in Buenos Aires and San Martín Square in Córdoba was 768 km (477 mi) long, with 42 bridges, 1,412 sewer covers and 17 level crossings, with a cost of 41,000,000 pesos moneda nacional, equivalent to 12,000,000 US dollars at the time.[4] In 1939 access to Buenos Aires from Pilar was completed, passing through Campo de Mayo and San Martín.

 
Change of road layout for National Route 9 in 1943

In those days, the Buenos Aires - General Pacheco - Campana - Zárate section was part of National Route 12. In 1943 Buenos Aires Province transferred the road section Campana - San Nicolás under construction to the national government, making it part of National Route 9, along with the Buenos Aires - Campana section of Route 12. This way they shortened the road distance between the two most populous cities in Argentina. You can see in the map the new road layout of National Route 9 in red, and the old one in green.

In 1950 the Dirección Nacional de Vialidad (Public Works Dept) paved the Ramallo to San Nicolás de los Arroyos section, and between 1952 and 1953 they finished the Campana to Atucha section and in 1956 the road was fully paved from Buenos Aires to Rosario.[3]

After the change of layout in 1979, the route was fully paved except for a short piece north of Humahuaca, in Jujuy Province, which was an improved road.[5] Works to finalize the route started in 1997 and were extended until 30 April 2004,[6] opening to the public on 21 January 2005.[7]

Divided lanes

Buenos Aires - Rosario Highway

 
Highway 9 leading north from Buenos Aires

The section passing through Greater Buenos Aires to the Port of Campana access road is part of "Acceso Norte" (a 120 km-length road that runs from Avenida General Paz (Buenos Aires city border) to Route 9, with branches to Tigre and Pilar through National Route 8).[8] The section between Avenida General Paz to the start of Route 8 is named "Autopista Pascual Palazzo" (by Decree 17/1981).[9]

In 1943 the Dirección Nacional de Vialidad presented a plan for access to the city of Buenos Aires.[10] Based on this plan, by the end of the forties work was started in what is known today as "Acceso Norte" (North Access) to Buenos Aires, reaching the town of Garín in 1959. In 1971 the section Garín-Campana was opened. In 1977 the Campana-Zárate highway was opened, allowing access to the Zárate-Brazo Largo Bridge inaugurated that same year. In the year 1978 the section from San Nicolás de los Arroyos to Rosario was opened. This section is called “Teniente General Juan José Valle” (Law 26,927, which derogates Decree 2,146/1979 that had called it "Teniente General Pedro Eugenio Aramburu").[11][9] In 1987 the last section of this highway was completed, between Campana and the Tala River.

Rosario – Córdoba Highway

The Rosario – Córdoba highway project dates from 1970.[12] On this project they would build a highway between these two cities over a new road, leaving the original road with one lane each way for local traffic, as it lies next to the Ferrocarril General Bartolomé Mitre railroad, and traverses through the center of the different towns along its path.

On 12 November 1986, construction of the new highway between Córdoba and Villa María was bid, but the project never came to fruition.[13] The highway was started by two of the contractor companies on this route in the 1990s as part of the concession contracts. The agreement only included the sections from Avenida de Circunvalación de Córdoba to Pilar and from Avenida de Circunvalación de Rosario to Armstrong. On this last section, the Covicentro company only built the road to Carcarañá.

In the year 2000 the national government opened a bid for the 109 km (68 mi) between Pilar and Villa María, with the contract only covering one lane in the section from Oliva to Villa María, with the winning bid from Benito Roggio e Hijos.[14] In February 2006 the same group secured the contract from Oliva to Villa María and the 36 km (22 mi) from Villa María to Ballesteros, while the works on the 62 km (39 mi) between Ballesteros and Leones was given to the IECSA company, belonging to Grupo Macri.[15]

On 3 May 2006, the national government opened the bidding process for the remaining sections of the highway in Santa Fe Province. The DYCASA company took charge of the section between Carcarañá and Armstrong, while a joint venture of Esuco and Chediack obtained the contracts for the highway between Armstrong and Tortugas...[16][17]

The highway was fully inaugurated on 22 December 2010.

Salta Province

In the decade of the 2000s the section shared with National Route 34 in Salta Province became a four-lane road (two on each way).

Right of way changes of 1979

The National Government by Decree 1595 in 1979 where several routes changed to provincial jurisdiction and vice versa, also changed the layout and right-of-way of some of them.[18]

Greater Buenos Aires

 
National Route 9, San Isidro, north of Buenos Aires

In Greater Buenos Aires, before the completion of the Accesso Norte, Route 9 ran through the present streets Boulogne Sur Mer, Presidente Sarmiento and Constituyentes Ave. in Tigre Partido. This 15 km (9 mi) section from Don Torcuato and the border between Benavídez and Garín left national jurisdiction by the aforementioned decree. Nowadays it is part of Provincial Route 9.[19]

Buenos Aires - Santa Fe Province limits

Between San Nicolás de los Arroyos (Buenos Aires Province) and Rosario (Santa Fe Province), the road run closer to the Paraná River, northwest of the Ferrocarril General Bartolomé Mitre railway. After construction of the San Nicolás de los Arroyos - Rosario highway southeast of said railway line at the end of the 1970s, this road changed to provincial control by the aforementioned decree. The transferred sections were 16.5 km (10.3 mi) in Buenos Aires Province (how secondary Provincial Route 098–06, also known as Presidente Illia access)[20] and 68.8 km (42.8 mi) in Santa Fe Province (now Provincial Route 21).

Tucumán - Salta Province Limits

 
Change of right of way in Salta Province

In Salta Province, 1 km (0.6 mi) north of the Salta-Tucumán border, the road turned to the west then north, turning into a mountain road, 104 km (65 mi) packed dirt until the town of La Viña.[5] This section was transferred to Salta Province, changing its name to Provincial Route 6. Between the aforementioned town and the city of Salta, the road ran for 79 km (49 mi). This section remained under national jurisdiction, with the new name of National Route 68.

As of 2007 Provincial Route 6 is still unpaved and in some sections it is almost impassable.[21]

On 30 October 1980 the Dirección Nacional de Vialidad and its provincial counterpart signed and agreement to transfer National Route 9 inside the city of Salta between the bridge over the Arenales river and Vidt street to provincial control. The agreement was ratified by de facto provincial law.[22]

The old road is shown in green and the new one in red in the map.

Distances and important cities

The following table shows the distances traversed by National Route 9 in each different province, and important cities that it passes by (or near).

 
Route 9 in Tucumán
Province From To Length Passes by
Buenos Aires km 12 km 237 225 km Campana, Zárate, San Nicolás de los Arroyos
Santa Fe km 237 km 419 182 km Villa Constitución, Rosario, Cañada de Gómez
Córdoba km 419 km 910 491 km Bell Ville, Villa María, Córdoba
Santiago del Estero km 910 km 1223 313 km Santiago del Estero, Termas de Río Hondo
Tucumán km 1223 km 1371 148 km San Miguel de Tucumán
Salta km 1371 km 1648 277 km Rosario de la Frontera, General Güemes, Salta
Jujuy km 1648 km 1979 318 km San Salvador de Jujuy, Humahuaca, La Quiaca

See also

References

  1. ^ Google (5 August 2021). "National Route 9 (Argentina)" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 5 August 2021.
  2. ^ a b Redacción Crónica Ferroviaria (2008). (in Spanish). Crónica Ferroviaria. Archived from the original on 2008-02-21. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  3. ^ a b Dirección Nacional de Vialidad (2001). (in Spanish). Internet Archive. Archived from the original on 2001-10-31. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  4. ^ Guía Peuser de Turismo (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Editorial Peuser - Buenos Aires. 1950.
  5. ^ a b Rutas Nacionales (in Spanish). Centro Cartográfico Buenos Aires. c. 1975.
  6. ^ Contaduría General de la Nación (2005). "Dirección Nacional de Vialidad, informe por programa, ejercicio 2004" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  7. ^ Dirección Provincial de prensa de Jujuy (2005). (in Spanish). Internet Archive. Archived from the original on 2007-02-18. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  8. ^ Corredores Viales – Accesos on Government of Argentina website
  9. ^ a b Dirección Nacional de Vialidad (2007). (in Spanish). Archived from the original on November 27, 2007. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  10. ^ Domínguez Roca, Luis J. (2005). "Planes urbanos y transporte en la Ciudad de Buenos Aires" (in Spanish). ISSN 1138-9788. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  11. ^ "Ley 26.927: Rutas Nacionales". InfoLEG. Retrieved 22 August 2018.
  12. ^ Revista Vial número 42 (2005). (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina: Editorial Revistas. Archived from the original on 2009-01-23. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  13. ^ Diario La Voz del Interior (2007-08-26). "Las mismas rutas para 40% más de tránsito" (in Spanish). Córdoba, Argentina. Archived from the original on 2012-06-29. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  14. ^ Contaduría General de la Nación (2001). "Cuenta de Inversión 2000, Ministerio de Infraestructura y Vivienda" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  15. ^ Zysman, Guillermo (2006-02-26). (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina: Diario Página/12. Archived from the original on 2009-01-23. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  16. ^ Diario digital RosarioNet (25 June 2007). (in Spanish). Rosario, Argentina. Archived from the original on 2011-05-31. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  17. ^ Diario La Capital (3 May 2006). "Abrieron los sobres de la licitación de la autopista Rosario-Córdoba" (in Spanish). Rosario, Argentina. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  18. ^ Dirección Nacional de Vialidad (2000). "Decreto Nacional 1595/79 con comentarios" (PDF) (in Spanish). Retrieved 2008-03-22.[dead link]
  19. ^ Dirección de Vialidad de la Provincia de Buenos Aires (2007). "Nuestras Rutas" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  20. ^ Instituto de Planeamiento Urbano de San Nicolás (2004). (PDF) (in Spanish). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 6, 2009. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  21. ^ Curti, Pablo Alejandro (2007). Atlas de rutas Firestone Argentina, sur de Brasil, Chile, Paraguay, Uruguay (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Megamapa. ISBN 987-21490-8-9.
  22. ^ Gobierno de la Provincia de Salta (1981). (in Spanish). Cámara de diputados de la Provincia de Salta. Archived from the original on 2008-02-20. Retrieved 2008-03-22.

External links

  • Autopistas del Sol, concession holder (Buenos Aires)
  • Corredores Viales, concession holder (Santa Fe)
  • Caminos de las Sierras, concession holder (Córdoba)

national, route, argentina, this, article, expanded, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, spanish, november, 2021, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, spanish, article, machine, translation, l. This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish November 2021 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Spanish article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es Ruta Nacional 9 Argentina see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated es Ruta Nacional 9 Argentina to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation National Route 9 in Spanish Ruta Nacional 9 is a major road in Argentina which runs from the center east to the northwest of the country crossing the provinces of Buenos Aires Santa Fe Cordoba Santiago del Estero Tucuman Salta and Jujuy It starts on Avenida General Paz which marks the border between the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires and the surrounding province of the same name and ends at the Horacio Guzman International Bridge on the La Quiaca River traversing 1 967 km 1 222 mi The road is a limited access motorway from Buenos Aires to Rosario National Route 9Ruta nacional 9Route informationLength1 967 km 1 222 mi Major junctionsNorth endRoute 14 Bolivia at the Bolivian border at Horacio Guzman International Bridge in La QuiacaMajor intersections South endto Avenida LugonesLocationCountryArgentinaMajor citiesFlorida Boulogne Tortuguitas Campana Zarate San Nicolas de los Arroyos Empalme Villa Constitucion Rosario Canada de Gomez Villa Maria Cordoba Jesus Maria Santiago del Estero San Miguel de Tucuman Rosario de la Frontera Metan Salta San Salvador de Jujuy La Quiaca 1 Highway systemHighways in ArgentinaBetween the cities of San Nicolas de los Arroyos and Rosario distant about 65 km 40 mi from each other the road is named Teniente General Juan Jose Valle Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginnings 1 2 Pavement 1 3 Divided lanes 1 3 1 Buenos Aires Rosario Highway 1 3 2 Rosario Cordoba Highway 1 3 3 Salta Province 1 4 Right of way changes of 1979 1 4 1 Greater Buenos Aires 1 4 2 Buenos Aires Santa Fe Province limits 1 4 3 Tucuman Salta Province Limits 2 Distances and important cities 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditBeginnings Edit The route originated as the Camino Real del Peru Royal Road of Peru used since colonial times to travel from Buenos Aires through Cordoba Santiago del Estero San Miguel de Tucuman Salta San Salvador de Jujuy and Potosi continuing to Peru The section between Buenos Aires and the south of what it is today Cordoba Province was shared with the Camino Real del Oeste Royal Road of the West which branched towards San Luis Mendoza and Santiago Chile The road had a system of small inns and establishments every 30 50 km where travellers could rest After the coming of the railroad in the second half of the 19th Century this road lost relevance as the railroad provided faster service on any type of weather The first train from Buenos Aires arrived in the town of La Quiaca in Argentina s northern border with Bolivia on 30 December 1907 2 With the advent of the automobile the Federal Government decided to build roads throughout the Republic In 1936 the road from Buenos Aires to La Quiaca was named Ruta Nacional 9 National Route 9 In 1943 the road was open to traffic in its full length even though most of it was unpaved The road started competing against the railroad taking passengers and cargo The last passenger train to La Quiaca arrived in December 1993 and the last cargo train in July 1994 2 Pavement Edit The Buenos Aires to Rosario section was paved by 27 December 1936 The work reached Cordoba on 5 June 1937 3 It should be mentioned that National Route 9 had a different layout in those days as the road traversed through Pilar to Pergamino on the roadbed of today s National Route 8 and then it turned north going to Rosario The road between Congress Square Plaza Congreso in Buenos Aires and San Martin Square in Cordoba was 768 km 477 mi long with 42 bridges 1 412 sewer covers and 17 level crossings with a cost of 41 000 000 pesos moneda nacional equivalent to 12 000 000 US dollars at the time 4 In 1939 access to Buenos Aires from Pilar was completed passing through Campo de Mayo and San Martin Change of road layout for National Route 9 in 1943 In those days the Buenos Aires General Pacheco Campana Zarate section was part of National Route 12 In 1943 Buenos Aires Province transferred the road section Campana San Nicolas under construction to the national government making it part of National Route 9 along with the Buenos Aires Campana section of Route 12 This way they shortened the road distance between the two most populous cities in Argentina You can see in the map the new road layout of National Route 9 in red and the old one in green In 1950 the Direccion Nacional de Vialidad Public Works Dept paved the Ramallo to San Nicolas de los Arroyos section and between 1952 and 1953 they finished the Campana to Atucha section and in 1956 the road was fully paved from Buenos Aires to Rosario 3 After the change of layout in 1979 the route was fully paved except for a short piece north of Humahuaca in Jujuy Province which was an improved road 5 Works to finalize the route started in 1997 and were extended until 30 April 2004 6 opening to the public on 21 January 2005 7 Divided lanes Edit Buenos Aires Rosario Highway Edit Highway 9 leading north from Buenos Aires The section passing through Greater Buenos Aires to the Port of Campana access road is part of Acceso Norte a 120 km length road that runs from Avenida General Paz Buenos Aires city border to Route 9 with branches to Tigre and Pilar through National Route 8 8 The section between Avenida General Paz to the start of Route 8 is named Autopista Pascual Palazzo by Decree 17 1981 9 In 1943 the Direccion Nacional de Vialidad presented a plan for access to the city of Buenos Aires 10 Based on this plan by the end of the forties work was started in what is known today as Acceso Norte North Access to Buenos Aires reaching the town of Garin in 1959 In 1971 the section Garin Campana was opened In 1977 the Campana Zarate highway was opened allowing access to the Zarate Brazo Largo Bridge inaugurated that same year In the year 1978 the section from San Nicolas de los Arroyos to Rosario was opened This section is called Teniente General Juan Jose Valle Law 26 927 which derogates Decree 2 146 1979 that had called it Teniente General Pedro Eugenio Aramburu 11 9 In 1987 the last section of this highway was completed between Campana and the Tala River Rosario Cordoba Highway Edit The Rosario Cordoba highway project dates from 1970 12 On this project they would build a highway between these two cities over a new road leaving the original road with one lane each way for local traffic as it lies next to the Ferrocarril General Bartolome Mitre railroad and traverses through the center of the different towns along its path On 12 November 1986 construction of the new highway between Cordoba and Villa Maria was bid but the project never came to fruition 13 The highway was started by two of the contractor companies on this route in the 1990s as part of the concession contracts The agreement only included the sections from Avenida de Circunvalacion de Cordoba to Pilar and from Avenida de Circunvalacion de Rosario to Armstrong On this last section the Covicentro company only built the road to Carcarana In the year 2000 the national government opened a bid for the 109 km 68 mi between Pilar and Villa Maria with the contract only covering one lane in the section from Oliva to Villa Maria with the winning bid from Benito Roggio e Hijos 14 In February 2006 the same group secured the contract from Oliva to Villa Maria and the 36 km 22 mi from Villa Maria to Ballesteros while the works on the 62 km 39 mi between Ballesteros and Leones was given to the IECSA company belonging to Grupo Macri 15 On 3 May 2006 the national government opened the bidding process for the remaining sections of the highway in Santa Fe Province The DYCASA company took charge of the section between Carcarana and Armstrong while a joint venture of Esuco and Chediack obtained the contracts for the highway between Armstrong and Tortugas 16 17 The highway was fully inaugurated on 22 December 2010 Salta Province Edit In the decade of the 2000s the section shared with National Route 34 in Salta Province became a four lane road two on each way Right of way changes of 1979 Edit The National Government by Decree 1595 in 1979 where several routes changed to provincial jurisdiction and vice versa also changed the layout and right of way of some of them 18 Greater Buenos Aires Edit National Route 9 San Isidro north of Buenos Aires In Greater Buenos Aires before the completion of the Accesso Norte Route 9 ran through the present streets Boulogne Sur Mer Presidente Sarmiento and Constituyentes Ave in Tigre Partido This 15 km 9 mi section from Don Torcuato and the border between Benavidez and Garin left national jurisdiction by the aforementioned decree Nowadays it is part of Provincial Route 9 19 Buenos Aires Santa Fe Province limits Edit Between San Nicolas de los Arroyos Buenos Aires Province and Rosario Santa Fe Province the road run closer to the Parana River northwest of the Ferrocarril General Bartolome Mitre railway After construction of the San Nicolas de los Arroyos Rosario highway southeast of said railway line at the end of the 1970s this road changed to provincial control by the aforementioned decree The transferred sections were 16 5 km 10 3 mi in Buenos Aires Province how secondary Provincial Route 098 06 also known as Presidente Illia access 20 and 68 8 km 42 8 mi in Santa Fe Province now Provincial Route 21 Tucuman Salta Province Limits Edit Change of right of way in Salta Province In Salta Province 1 km 0 6 mi north of the Salta Tucuman border the road turned to the west then north turning into a mountain road 104 km 65 mi packed dirt until the town of La Vina 5 This section was transferred to Salta Province changing its name to Provincial Route 6 Between the aforementioned town and the city of Salta the road ran for 79 km 49 mi This section remained under national jurisdiction with the new name of National Route 68 As of 2007 Provincial Route 6 is still unpaved and in some sections it is almost impassable 21 On 30 October 1980 the Direccion Nacional de Vialidad and its provincial counterpart signed and agreement to transfer National Route 9 inside the city of Salta between the bridge over the Arenales river and Vidt street to provincial control The agreement was ratified by de facto provincial law 22 The old road is shown in green and the new one in red in the map Distances and important cities EditThe following table shows the distances traversed by National Route 9 in each different province and important cities that it passes by or near Route 9 in Tucuman Province From To Length Passes byBuenos Aires km 12 km 237 225 km Campana Zarate San Nicolas de los ArroyosSanta Fe km 237 km 419 182 km Villa Constitucion Rosario Canada de GomezCordoba km 419 km 910 491 km Bell Ville Villa Maria CordobaSantiago del Estero km 910 km 1223 313 km Santiago del Estero Termas de Rio HondoTucuman km 1223 km 1371 148 km San Miguel de TucumanSalta km 1371 km 1648 277 km Rosario de la Frontera General Guemes SaltaJujuy km 1648 km 1979 318 km San Salvador de Jujuy Humahuaca La QuiacaSee also EditPan American HighwayReferences Edit Google 5 August 2021 National Route 9 Argentina Map Google Maps Google Retrieved 5 August 2021 a b Redaccion Cronica Ferroviaria 2008 Boletin informativo numero 140 in Spanish Cronica Ferroviaria Archived from the original on 2008 02 21 Retrieved 2008 03 22 a b Direccion Nacional de Vialidad 2001 Sabia que in Spanish Internet Archive Archived from the original on 2001 10 31 Retrieved 2008 03 22 Guia Peuser de Turismo in Spanish Buenos Aires Editorial Peuser Buenos Aires 1950 a b Rutas Nacionales in Spanish Centro Cartografico Buenos Aires c 1975 Contaduria General de la Nacion 2005 Direccion Nacional de Vialidad informe por programa ejercicio 2004 in Spanish Retrieved 2008 03 22 Direccion Provincial de prensa de Jujuy 2005 Partes de prensa del 21 de enero de 2005 in Spanish Internet Archive Archived from the original on 2007 02 18 Retrieved 2008 03 22 Corredores Viales Accesos on Government of Argentina website a b Direccion Nacional de Vialidad 2007 Nuestras Rutas in Spanish Archived from the original on November 27 2007 Retrieved 2008 03 22 Dominguez Roca Luis J 2005 Planes urbanos y transporte en la Ciudad de Buenos Aires in Spanish ISSN 1138 9788 Retrieved 2008 03 22 Ley 26 927 Rutas Nacionales InfoLEG Retrieved 22 August 2018 Revista Vial numero 42 2005 Autopista Rosario Cordoba obra que se abre camino in Spanish Buenos Aires Argentina Editorial Revistas Archived from the original on 2009 01 23 Retrieved 2008 03 22 Diario La Voz del Interior 2007 08 26 Las mismas rutas para 40 mas de transito in Spanish Cordoba Argentina Archived from the original on 2012 06 29 Retrieved 2008 03 22 Contaduria General de la Nacion 2001 Cuenta de Inversion 2000 Ministerio de Infraestructura y Vivienda in Spanish Retrieved 2008 03 22 Zysman Guillermo 2006 02 26 Dos tramos de la autopista a Cordoba para Macri y Benito Roggio in Spanish Buenos Aires Argentina Diario Pagina 12 Archived from the original on 2009 01 23 Retrieved 2008 03 22 Diario digital RosarioNet 25 June 2007 Prosiguen las tasaciones de terrenos incluidos en la traza de la Autopista Rosario Cordoba in Spanish Rosario Argentina Archived from the original on 2011 05 31 Retrieved 2008 03 22 Diario La Capital 3 May 2006 Abrieron los sobres de la licitacion de la autopista Rosario Cordoba in Spanish Rosario Argentina Retrieved 2008 03 22 Direccion Nacional de Vialidad 2000 Decreto Nacional 1595 79 con comentarios PDF in Spanish Retrieved 2008 03 22 dead link Direccion de Vialidad de la Provincia de Buenos Aires 2007 Nuestras Rutas in Spanish Retrieved 2008 03 22 Instituto de Planeamiento Urbano de San Nicolas 2004 Bases para el Desarrollo del Plan Urbano Ambiental PDF in Spanish Archived from the original PDF on August 6 2009 Retrieved 2008 03 22 Curti Pablo Alejandro 2007 Atlas de rutas Firestone Argentina sur de Brasil Chile Paraguay Uruguay in Spanish Buenos Aires Megamapa ISBN 987 21490 8 9 Gobierno de la Provincia de Salta 1981 Ley 5872 promulgada el 17 de diciembre de 1981 in Spanish Camara de diputados de la Provincia de Salta Archived from the original on 2008 02 20 Retrieved 2008 03 22 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Route 9 Argentina Autopistas del Sol concession holder Buenos Aires Corredores Viales concession holder Santa Fe Caminos de las Sierras concession holder Cordoba Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National Route 9 Argentina amp oldid 1144178451, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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