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Shields of Pakistan #396
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I recall Pakistan's road route relations being tagged with a format like |
Yes, |
According to the Pakistan taginfo (helpful link, I forgot about the country projects), there are 28 relations with |
That would work great and makes this easier! Most of the road route relations in Pakistan (and the It didn't look like I would be stepping on any toes, but I did contact the one currently active Pakistan highway route mapper just in case. They've added routes like the Gwadar East Bay Expressway which just opened a week ago and doesn't fit into any of the networks described above, which is pretty interesting. |
Sounds like a |
Found on this archive of Pakistan sign codes: https://github.com/govdotpk/highway-code-book I'm curious to find any photo examples of the signs on the right |
National highways and motorways merged in #415. |
I am creating this issue to start with seeing as there are issues for various country shields, but intend to look into the shields more, as well as how road routes are mapped in Pakistan, then will make a pull request at some point.
Pakistan has a network of National Highway routes designated by the national government which connect the country's major cities, and a Motorway network of routes installed relatively recently with the intent of providing connections between Pakistan's Arabian Sea ports and the Khunjerab Pass at the border with China as part of the "China-Pakistan Belt Road Initiative."
National Highway
ref
designations are prefixed withN-
and are displayed on a blue hexagonal shield:On guide signage they may look like this:
The hexagon outline is not always shown; as you can see on this sign, N-35 (Karakoram Highway) is referenced without the hexagon shape (not specific to the route or carrying any different meaning, just omitted on some signs):
Motorways in Pakistan have
ref
designations prefixed withM-
and green semi-circular shields:They are often shown on matching green guide signage like this:
Pakistan's provinces and territories also each have provincial or territorial highway networks. Their respective subdivisions assign different systems of
ref
designations for each, some of which do have their own shield designs but not all. The available images of signage for these is sporadic compared to the National Highways so it can be harder to discern, but here is an example a shield for the L-20 route, named Lahore Ring Road, of Punjab's provincial highway system:The same on guide signage (poor lighting in this picture unfortunately):
I am not sure if any other routes use the
L-
prefix; it takes the first letter of the city name despite being designated and maintained by the province of Punjab rather than the municipality of Lahore.Further, there is an additional highway network known as the Strategic Highway network which is maintained and operated by the Pakistan Ministry of Defence. These have their own
ref
designations with theS-
prefix followed by a number. I am not yet sure if these have their own shields. Unhelpfully, both the provinces of Sindh and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa also useS
as a prefix.S-2
(Strategic Highway),S-2
(Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Provincial Highway, andS02
(Sindh Provincial Highway) are all different routes.Some of Pakistan's National Highways and Motorways are part of the Asian Highway Network discussed in issue #122. At the moment I am unsure of the extent to which Asian Highway shields are signed in Pakistan, and how they are styled compared to other countries. It looks like the Pakistani portions of the Asian Highway Network have yet to be mapped to the extent that its members have in neighboring countries. For reference, here is the Pakistan-China border in Americana at the moment, where you can see where the N-35 (Karakoram Highway in Pakistan) becomes the G314 (Karakoram Highway in China), but the AH4 default shield only shows on the Chinese side of the highway:
Other neighboring countries which connect to Pakistan's highway network include India (#225), Iran, and Afghanistan.
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