A9 road | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | Zimbabwe |
Highway system | |
The A9 Road is a national highway in Zimbabwe running from Mutare to Mbalabala. The road begins in Mutare ( 18°59′01″S32°39′36″E / 18.983492°S 32.66002°E ) and runs south-west through Nyanyadzi, Birchenough Bridge, Masvingo, Mashava, Zvishavane, Filabusi and ends at Mbalabala where it joins the (A6) Bulawayo-Beit Bridge Highway near the 61.5 km peg. ( 20°26′38″S29°02′28″E / 20.44375°S 29.041006°E ) [1] The 513 kilometres (319 mi) highway is about a 6 hours 15 minute drive.
A9 Highway is an inter-city and an inter-district primary road divided into two link roads namely P4 (Masvingo-Mutare Highway) and P7 (Masvingo-Mbalabala Highway) to suite the trunk road linking system.
The A9 Highway is the shortest route from Botswana through the Plumtree Border Post to Mutare, and from south-western Zambia through the Victoria Falls Border Post but the greater part of the A9 Highway is not designated as the regional road corridor. The P4 part of this highway plays an important role in linking regional traffic from South Africa to Mutare and to parts of central-western Mozambique through the Beitbridge Border Post. P4 begins in Masvingo and runs north-east most of way through Birchenough Bridge and Nyanyadzi before linking with A3 Highway in Mutare.
The P7 part connects Masvingo with Mashava, Zvishavane, Filabusi. It ends at Mbalabala where it forms a T-junction with A6 to link with Gwanda, Esigodini and Bulawayo. At Zvishavane P7 intersects with A18 Highway that runs from Gweru to Zvishavane.
This article contains a bulleted list or table of intersections which should be presented in a properly formatted junction table.(November 2021) |
• The first major junction is from Mutare is Chimanimani turn-off where the A10 Highway branches left (east) to Chimanimani and Cashel. ( 19°30′22″S32°31′51″E / 19.506136°S 32.530792°E )
• The second junction is just three and half kilometres before Birchenough Bridge where A16 Highway to Chipinga branches left. ( 19°57′04″S32°22′05″E / 19.951189°S 32.36808°E )
• The third junction is in Masvingo where A9 Highway intersects with A4 Highway which runs from Harare to Beitbridge. ( 20°04′19″S30°50′04″E / 20.0720092°S 30.834566°E )
• The fourth junction is at Zvishavane turn-off where it intersects with A18 Highway that runs from Gweru to Zvishavane. ( 20°18′51″S30°03′09″E / 20.31421°S 30.052465°E ) There are however smaller junctions all the way from Mutare to Mbalabala which plan a very important role in the trunk road system.
• Birchenough Bridge ( 19°59′26″S30°59′44″E / 19.990668°S 30.995527°E ) Birchnough Bridge is one of those places tourist do not want to miss.
• Masvingo is the largest waypoint on this road. It is the capital city of Masvingo Province and home to the Great Zimbabwe ruins.
• Zvishavane is just off the road at the junction of this Masvingo-Mbalabala Highway and the Gweru-Zvishavane Highway.
• Filabusi
• Mbalabala though the end of the A9 Highway is not usually the destination of motorists using this road. So it will be another waypoint for those travelling to either Gwanda or Bulawayo.
The government of Zimbabwe is the main provider of air, rail and road services; historically, there has been little participation of private investors in transport infrastructure.
Beitbridge is a border town in the province of Matabeleland South, Zimbabwe. The name also refers to the border post and bridge spanning the Limpopo River, which forms the political border between South Africa and Zimbabwe. The border on the South African side of the river is also named Beitbridge.
The Republic of Zimbabwe is broken down into 10 administrative provinces, which are divided into 64 districts and 1,970 wards.
Filabusi is a town in the Matabeleland South Province of Zimbabwe. The town is the administrative capital of Insiza District and a service centre for the surrounding mining and farming areas.
Mbalabala, originally known as Balla Balla, is a village on the main Beitbridge-Bulawayo road in uMzingwane district(at the junction with the Filabusi Road) in Matabeleland South providence, Zimbabwe. Situated approximately 41 miles (66 km) south-east of the city of Bulawayo. The name is derived from the Ndebele name for the greater kudu ( ibhalabhala). It was originally rendered Balla Balla by Europeans, which was altered to its present name in 1982 by the Zimbabwean government in order to coincide closer with the local orthography.
The Insiza River is the principal tributary of the Mzingwane River in Zimbabwe.
Chipinge, formerly known as Chipinga, is a town in Zimbabwe, located in Chipinge District, in Manicaland Province, in southeastern Zimbabwe, close to the border with Mozambique.
The A4 is a highway, also known as the R1 Highway, which runs between Beitbridge and Harare. From Beitbridge it passes through Rutenga, Ngundu, Masvingo, Mvuma, Chivhu before reaching Harare.
The A6 is a highway in Zimbabwe running from the Beitbridge border with South Africa, through Gwanda, to Bulawayo. It is part of the R9 Route, which links Beitbridge with Victoria Falls.
Railway station in Beitbridge include:
Chirundu–Beitbridge Road Corridor is a Trans-African Highway Network Zimbabwean link between South Africa and Zambia. It is part of the North–South Corridor Project and forms the entire Zimbabwean section of the Cape to Cairo Road.
The R6 Highway is a primary road, a trunk road and regional road corridor link road in Zimbabwe.
R7 Highway is a primary, paved, regional road corridor in central Zimbabwe virtue of linking the regional corridors R1 Highways that runs from Harare to Beitbridge via Masvingo, and R2 Highway that runs from Harare to Plumtree via Bulawayo.
A18 Road is a national road running from Gweru to Zvishavane/A9 Highway junction in central Zimbabwe. It begins in Gweru at the roundabout where 7th Street ends. 19°27′34″S29°49′27″E and ends at the intersection with A9/P7 Highway just after Zvishavane town. 20°18′51″S30°03′09″E
The A10 Highway is a primary road that runs from Ngundu in south Masvingo Province to Tanganda through the Mutare-Masvingo Highway in Manicaland Province.
Beira-Bulawayo railway, also called Machipanda railway, Beira-Harare-Bulawayo railway and Beira railway, is a railway that connects the city of Beira, Mozambique, to the city of Bulawayo, in Zimbabwe. It is 850 km long, in a 1067 mm gauge.