PAN-EUROPEAN CORRIDORS

Map of the ten Pan-European transport corridors

The ten 'Pan-European transport corridors' were defined at the second Pan-European transport Conference in Crete, March 1994, as routes in Central and Eastern Europe that required major investment over the next ten to fifteen years. Additions were made at the third conference in Helsinki in 1997. Therefore, these corridors are sometimes referred to as the "Crete corridors" or "Helsinki corridors", regardless of their geographical locations. A tenth corridor was proposed after the end of hostilities between the states of the former Yugoslavia.
These development corridors are distinct from the Trans-European transport networks, which include all major established routes in the European Union, although there are proposals to combine the two systems.
I(North-South) Helsinki - Tallinn - Riga - Kaunas and Klaipėda - Warsaw and Gdańsk
★ Branch A (Via/Rail Hanseatica) - St. Petersburg to Riga to Kaliningrad to GdaÅ„sk to Lübeck
★ Via Baltica (E 67) - Helsinki to Warsaw.
II(East-West) Berlin - Poznań - Warsaw - Brest - Minsk - Smolensk - Moscow - Nizhny Novgorod
IIIBrussels - Aachen - Köln - Dresden - Wrocław - Katowice - Kraków - Lviv - Kiev
IVDresden/Nuremberg - Prague - Vienna - Bratislava - Győr - Budapest - Arad - Bucharest - Constanţa / Craiova - Sofia - Thessaloniki / Plovdiv - Istanbul.
V(East-West) Venice - Trieste/Koper - Ljubljana - Maribor - Budapest - Uzhhorod - Lviv - Kiev. 1600 km long.
★ Branch A - Bratislava - Žilina - KoÅ¡ice - Uzhhorod
★ Branch B - Rijeka - Zagreb - Budapest
Branch C - Ploče - Sarajevo - Osijek - Budapest
VI(North-South) Gdańsk - Katowice - Žilina, with a western branch Katowice-Brno.
VII (The Danube River) (Northwest-Southeast) - 2,300 km long.
VIIIDurrës - Tirana - - Skopje - Bitola - Sofia - Dimitrovgrad - Burgas - Varna. 1300 km long.
IXHelsinki - Vyborg - St. Petersburg - Pskov - Moscow - Kaliningrad - Kiev - Ljubashevka/Rozdilna (Ukraine) - Chişinău - Bucharest - Dimitrovgrad - Alexandroupolis. A branch runs from Ljubashevka/Rozdilna to Odesa. 3,400 km long.
★ Branch A - Helsinki to St. Petersburg to Moscow
★ Branch B - Kaliningrad to Kiev
★ Branch D - Kaliningrad to Vilnius to Minsk
XSalzburg - Ljubljana - Zagreb - Beograd - Niš - Skopje - Veles - Thessaloniki.
★ Branch A: Graz - Maribor - Zagreb
★ Branch B: Budapest - Novi Sad - Beograd
★ Branch C: NiÅ¡ - Sofia - Dimitrovgrad - Istanbul via Corridor IV
★ Branch D: Veles - Prilep - Bitola - Florina - Igoumenitsa


Contents
See also
External link

See also



European long-distance paths

European route

External link



Maps of paneuropean corridors

Maps of the TEN corridors

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