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B1 road (Namibia)

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ron2K (talk | contribs) at 18:46, 1 July 2020 (mentioned the Walvis Bay-Ndola-Lubumbashi Development Road in the lede). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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B1 road
Map of the B1.
Route information
Maintained by Roads Authority Namibia
Length1,467 km (912 mi)
Excluding the 74-kilometre (46 mi) central section designated A1 since 2017.
Southern section
Length802 km (498 mi)
South end N7 at the South African border at Noordoewer
Major intersections B3 at Grünau
B4 near Keetmanshoop
North end A1 / B6 in Windhoek
Northern section
Length665 km (413 mi)
South end A1 / B2 near Okahandja
Major intersections B8 at Otavi
B15 at Tsumeb
B10 near Oshikango
North endEN 120 at the Angolan border at Oshikango
Location
CountryNamibia
Major citiesKeetmanshoop, Mariental, Rehoboth, Windhoek, Okahandja, Otjiwarongo, Otavi, Tsumeb, Ondangwa, Oshakati
TownsGrünau, Hardap, Oshivelo, Omuthiya, Endola, Oshikango
Highway system
A1 B2

The B1 is a national highway of Namibia, and is the country's longest and most significant road, running the length of the country from south to north. It connects Noordoewer in the south on the South African border with Oshikango in the north on the Angolan border via Namibia's capital city Windhoek.

The route exists in two discontinuous sections: a southern 802-kilometre (498 mi) section from Noordoewer to Windhoek, and a northern 665-kilometre (413 mi) section from Okahandja to Oshikango. The central 74-kilometre (46 mi) section between Windhoek and Okahandja, previously part of the B1, was upgraded to freeway standard beginning in the 1970s and continuing to 2022, with the freeway sections now carrying the designation of A1.

The entirety of the B1, together with the former section of B1 now designated A1, forms part of the Tripoli-Cape Town Highway. The section between Otjiwarongo and Otavi is part of the Walvis Bay-Ndola-Lubumbashi Development Road, and the former central section of the B1 (both prior to and after its redesignation to A1) forms part of the Trans-Kalahari Corridor.

Route

Important cities that the B1 passes through in a North-South direction include Oshikango, Ondangwa, Tsumeb, Otavi, Otjiwarongo, Okahandja, Windhoek, Rehoboth, Mariental, Keetmanshoop and Noordoewer.

Southern section: Noordoewer to Windhoek

The B1 begins on the South African border at a bridge over the Orange River near the town of Noordoewer, as a continuation of South Africa's N7 national route. It heads north to Grünau, where it meets the B3 from Karasburg (and Upington from continuing on South Africa's N10 national route) and the Nakop-Windhoek railway line. From there, it continues north to the city of Keetmanshoop; on the southern outskirts, it intersects by means of a traffic circle with the B4 to Lüderitz.

From Keetmanshoop, the route continues north along the western fringes of the Kalahari Desert, passing through Mariental, Kalkrand and Rehoboth. The route then passes through a mountainous region and emerges in the southern suburbs of Namibia's capital city Windhoek near Eros Airport.

Central section: Windhoek to Okahandja

Most of the 74-kilometre (46 mi) section between Windhoek and Okahandja has been upgraded to freeway standard (beginning with a western bypass of Windhoek built in the 1970s), and since April 2017, the freeway sections have been redesignated by the Roads Authority Namibia as the A1.[1] Remaining sections of the B1 just south of Okahandja are expected to be upgraded to freeway standard by 2022.[2]

Northern section: Okahandja to Oshikango

From Okahandja, the B1 resumes and heads north for approximately 175 kilometres (109 mi) to Otjiwarongo; this section is considered one of the deadliest roads in Namibia with a high crash fatality rate.[3] From Otjiwarongo, the B1 heads in a more north-easterly direction to avoid the Etosha National Park, passing through Otavi (where the B8 provides a route to the Caprivi Strip and the border with Zambia) before reaching Tsumeb.

At Tsumeb, the route makes a hard turn to the north-west at the intersection with the B15 and skirts the Etosha Pan to reach Oshivelo and thence Ondangwa, from where it resumes a northerly path and heads to Oshikango. At Oshikango, the route crosses the border into Angola and becomes the EN 120.

History

The northern stretch of the road from Tsumeb to Ondangwa via Namutoni was built in 1957–58. Ca. a decade later it was paved, but now it went through Oshivelo, and the paved section went from Ondangwa to Oshakati. The stretch from Ondangwa to Oshikango was still a gravel road.[4]

In 2007 the B1 lent its name to the B1 Butcher, a serial killer who professionally dismembered his victims and deposited body parts of at least five women near the road.[5] The murderer has never been identified.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ "New road, new name". Windhoek Express. 27 April 2017. Retrieved 1 July 2020. The Roads Authority (RA) of Namibia's chief executive officer, Conrad Lutombi, told a media briefing last week the completed section was renamed from B1 to A1 in accordance with the RA and ministry of works and transport standards.
  2. ^ Lunyangwe, Strauss (7 March 2019). "Dual carriageway to be completed by 2022". New Era Live. Retrieved 1 July 2020. Roads Authority (RA), says 37 kilometres of the Windhoek - Okahandja dual carriageway will be completed by September this year and the remaining 21 kilometres stretching towards Okahandja to be completed by 2022.
  3. ^ Shapwanale, Ndapewoshali (3 May 2017). "178km stretch of death". The Namibian. Retrieved 1 July 2020. The 178km stretch of road between Okahandja and Otjiwarongo has claimed more than 20 lives this year alone, making it one of the deadliest roads in the country.
  4. ^ Eriksson, Olle (January 2017). "Matkantekoa 'vanhaan hyvään aikaan'" [Travelling in the good old days]. Namibia. Newsletter of the Finnish-Namibia Society (in Finnish). Helsinki: Finnish-Namibia Society. pp. 28–30.
  5. ^ Body-parts find sparks hope in murder case IOL News
  6. ^ Menges, Werner (29 April 2008). "B-1 Butcher: DNA evidence in spotlight". The Namibian.