Yitzhak Shamir Road (Hebrew: דרך יצחק שמיר) is a section of Highway 1 between the Moriah Gate Interchange [he] and the Yigal Yadin Interchange [he]. In the past, this section was called Jerusalem Road 9 after the road construction project that was built by Moriah. The section apsses through the jurisdiction of the city of Jerusalem. The section of road initially opened in 2007, and includes construction of a bridge to split traffic on highway one to the area of the Moriah Gate Interchange and the construction of two tunnels in Emeq HaArazim. It is 3.6 km long and includes a two-lane tunnel around 400 meters long. ITs construction lasted six years and costed 500 million Israeli shekels ($125 million USD in 2007).

Yitzhak Shamir Road
Highway 1 (Israel).JPG
View from Ramot
Route information
Length3.6 km (2.2 mi)
Existed2001-2007–present
Component
highways
Highway 1
Major junctions
FromMoriah Gate Interchange [he]
ToYigal Yadin Interchange [he]
Location
CountryIsrael
RegionsGush Dan
Major citiesJerusalem
Highway system

The stretch of road allows for passengers from Gush Dan into the northern neighborhoods of Jerusalem and those travelling to the Dead Sea to bypass crowded urban transportation routes, therefore easing congestion at the western entrance to Jerusalem, which was only possible through Sakharov Gardens prior to construction.

History

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Entrance to the tunnel on the road in Emeq HaArazim

The potential route of the road was first determined in the Jerusalem Master Plan of 1968 [he], where it was designated as "Route 9." The eastern part of Highway 9, between Yigal Yadin and the East Gate Interchange [he], was paved in the 1980s and opened in January 1987.[1] In 1990, it was decided to go forward with construction of the western part of the road, to better link tavel from Ramot and East Gate to Northern Jerusalem, and to ease traffic in the entrance to the city.[2] However, the final plan was only approvied in 1999, after it was decided to dig tunnels along the route of the road under Mount Mitzpe Naftuch [he].[3]

It was under consideration that the road might be a toll road, but the idea was not implemented.[4] Construction began in 2001 by Ramet and Shapir Engineering & Industry [he]. Early estimates of construction hovered around 380 million Israeli shekels.[5] The road had a delay in paving due to oppositions from residents of Ramot, as many thought that a construction project would ruin the natural landscape of Emeq HaArazim, although the project did eventually begin.[6]

Yitzhak Sgamur Road was supposed to open in 2005, but was delayed due to budget cuts that slowed consistent construction.[7] In May 2007, a day before the planned opening ceremony, all events related to the opening road were cancelled due to an injunction from the Jerusalem District Court because of a petition filed by the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel which stated that the conservation of Emeq had not been fully completed.[8]

In October 2014, the road was named after Yitzhak Shamir, the 7th Prime Minister of Israel.[9]

References

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  1. ^ ITIM (7 Oct 1987). "A road connecting Ramot to French Hill opens in Jerusalem". Hadashot (in Hebrew). p. 2. Retrieved 3 Sep 2024.
  2. ^ Posen, Avi (19 Jan 1990). "New entrance to the north of the city, the whole city". Kol Ha'ir (in Hebrew). p. 17. Retrieved 3 Sep 2024.
  3. ^ לנדאו, אפי (1999-08-23). "אושר כביש 9 בכניסה המערבית לירושלים". Globes (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2024-09-03.
  4. ^ חיון, דוד (2000-04-17). "כביש 9: ניסוי ראשון באגרת גודש". Globes (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2024-09-03.
  5. ^ ציגלמן, מאת ענת (10 Oct 2001). "החלה סלילת כביש גישה חדש לירושלים". Haaretz (in Hebrew). Retrieved 3 Sep 2024.
  6. ^ ניסים, גל (2002-09-22). "בתום המאבק המשפטי: החלו העבודות בכביש מס' 9". Globes (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2024-09-03.
  7. ^ ג'ורג'י, ענת (1 Jan 2004). "מוריה תאט העבודות בכביש 9 בכניסה לי-ם; פתיחתו תידחה". Haaretz (in Hebrew). Retrieved 3 Sep 2024.
  8. ^ בר-אלי, אבי (20 May 2007). "ברגע האחרון: בוטלה פתיחת כביש 9 בירושלים שהיה אמור להיחנך מחר במעמד רה"מ". Haaretz (in Hebrew). Retrieved 3 Sep 2024.
  9. ^ "דברי ראש הממשלה נתניהו בטקס חניכת דרך ע"ש ראש הממשלה לשעבר יצחק שמיר ז"ל". gov.il (in Hebrew). 19 Oct 2014. Retrieved 3 Sep 2024.