Mexican Federal Highway 30

Last updated

Carretera federal 30.svg

Federal Highway 30
Carretera Federal 30
Route information
Length 351.0 km [1] (218.1 mi)
Major junctions
East endCarretera federal 57.svg Fed. 57 in Monclova
West endCarretera federal 40.svg Fed. 40 in Torreón
Highway system

Mexican Federal Highways
List   Autopistas

Carretera federal 29.svg Fed. 29 Fed. 31 Carretera federal 31.svg

Federal Highway 30 (Spanish : Carretera Federal 30, Fed. 30) is a free part of the federal highways corridors (Spanish : los corredores carreteros federales). [2] The highway starts in Torreón at Fed. 40 in the southwest and winds across the central Mexican Plateau, following a roughly northeasterly direction. The highway eventually ends to the northeast in Monclova, Coahuila at Fed. 57. [3] The total length of Fed. 30 is 351.0 km (218.1 mi).

Spanish language Romance language

Spanish or Castilian is a Romance language that originated in the Castile region of Spain and today has hundreds of millions of native speakers in the Americas and Spain. It is a global language and the world's second-most spoken native language, after Mandarin Chinese.

Torreón Municipal seat in Coahuila, Mexico

Torreón is a city and seat of Torreón Municipality in the Mexican state of Coahuila. As of 2015, the city's population was 679,288. The metropolitan population as of 2015 was 1,497,734, making it the ninth-biggest metropolitan area in the country and the largest metropolitan area in state of Coahuila, as well as one of Mexico's most important economic and industrial centers. The cities of Torreón, Gómez Palacio, Lerdo, Matamoros, Francisco I. Madero, San Pedro, Bermejillo, and Tlahualilo form the area of La Laguna or the Comarca Lagunera, a basin within the Chihuahuan Desert.

Federal Highway 40, also called the Carretera Interoceánica, is a road beginning at Reynosa, Tamaulipas, just west of the Port of Brownsville, Texas, and ending at Fed. 15 in Villa Unión, Sinaloa, near Mazatlán and the Pacific coast. It is called Interoceanic as, once finished, the cities of Matamoros, Tamaulipas, on the Gulf of Mexico and Mazatlán on the Pacific Ocean will be linked.

The main Fed. 30 trunk runs from Torreón to Monclova at a length of 332.3 km (206.5 mi). At San Pedro de las Colonias, an additional 18.7 km (11.6 mi) spur reconnects Fed. 30 with Fed. 40 in La Cuchilla, Coahuila.

San Pedro, Coahuila Municipal seat in Coahuila, Mexico

San Pedro is a city located in the southwestern part of the state of Coahuila in Mexico. San Pedro lies east-northeast of the city of Torreón and serves as the seat of the surrounding municipality of the same name.

Related Research Articles

Federal Highway 2 is a free part of the federal highway corridors that runs along the Mexico–United States border. The highway is in two separate improved segments, starting in the west at Tijuana, Baja California, on the Pacific coast and ending in the east in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, on the Gulf of Mexico. Fed. 2 passes through the border states of Baja California, Sonora, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas. It has a total length of 1,963 kilometres (1,220 mi); 1,319 kilometres (820 mi) in the west and 644 kilometres (400 mi) in the east.

Federal Highway 53 (Fed. 53) is part of the free (libre) part of the federal highways corridors of Mexico, and connects metropolitan Monterrey, Nuevo León to Boquillas del Carmen, Coahuila near the Mexico–United States border.

Federal Highway 54 Fed. 54 is a free (libre) part of the federal highways corridors and connects Ciudad Mier, Tamaulipas, to Colima City.

Federal Highway 35 is a free part of the federal highways corridors of Mexico, that is in two separate improved segments.

Federal Highway 9 is a free part of the federal highways corridors. It crosses the center of Nuevo Leon, from Allende, Nuevo León to Cadereyta, Nuevo León. It has a length of 38 km (24 mi).

Mexican Federal Highway 12 highway in Mexico

Federal Highway 12 is a free part of the federal highways corridors of Mexico. Fed. 12 is set from Fed. 1 in central Baja California to Bahía de los Ángeles and its total length is 68 km (42.25 mi).

Federal Highway 14 is a free part of the federal highways corridors of Mexico.

Federal Highway 17 is a free part of the federal highways corridors of Mexico. The route runs from the Mexico – United States border at Agua Prieta, Sonora south to Moctezuma. The northern terminus of Fed. 17 transitions north into the United States at Douglas, Arizona as U.S. Route 191. The total length of the highway is about 169 km.

Federal Highway 22 is a free part of the federal highways corridors in two improved segments.

Federal Highway 29 is a free part of the federal highways corridors of Mexico. The highway connects Ciudad Acuña, Coahuila in the north near the Mexico – United States border to Morelos, Coahuila to the south. The total length of Fed. 29 is 104 km (65 mi). City streets in Ciudad Acuña connect the federal highways corridors to U.S. Route 277 in Del Rio, Texas.

Federal Highway 34, called locally Carretera Rodeo-Nazas and Carretera Nazas-Cuatillos), is a free part of the federal highways corridors of Mexico. The highway starts in the west about 5 km south of Rodeo, Durango along Fed. 45 and travels east then northeast towards the city of Nazas. From Nazas, the highway travels east until just before it reaches the western portion of Presa Francisco Zarco lake; from there, the highway travels southeast, traversing Fed. 40 and ending in Pedriceña. The total distance of Fed. 34 is 98 km.

Federal Highway 49 (Fed. 49) is a free (libre) part of the federal highways corridors of Mexico. The highway runs northwest-southeast in the western regions of the Mexican Plateau.

Federal Highway 51 (Fed. 51) is a free (libre) part of the federal highways corridors of Mexico. Fed. 51 has two segments: the first segment run from Ojuelos de Jalisco to Maravatío, Michoacán. The length of the first segment is 309.41 km. The second segment runs from Zitácuaro, Michoacán to Iguala, Guerrero. The length of the second segment is 399.05 km.

Federal Highway 57 (Fed. 57) is a free (libre) part of the federal highways corridors of Mexico.

Federal Highway 72 (Fed. 72) is a free (libre) part of the federal highways corridors of Mexico. The entire length of the highway is within Nayarit.

Federal Highway 76 (Fed. 76) is a free (libre) part of the federal highways corridors of Mexico. The entire length of the highway is within Nayarit.

Federal Highway 93 (Fed. 93) is a free (libre) part of the federal highways corridors of Mexico.

Federal Highway 126 is a free (libre) part of the federal highways corridors of Mexico. The highway runs from Morelia, Michoacán in the west to El Oro de Hidalgo, State of Mexico in the east. The eastern portion of the highway continues on to Atlacomulco as Fed. 5. The two nearest federal highways to the western and eastern termini of Fed. 126 are Fed. 55 in Atlacomulco and Fed. 15 in Morelia.

Federal Highway 190 is a Federal Highway of Mexico. Federal Highway 190 is split into two segments: the first segment travels from Tehuantepec, Oaxaca in the east to Puebla City, Puebla in the west. The second segment travels from La Ventosa, Juchitán de Zaragoza Municipality, Oaxaca in the west eastward to Ciudad Cuauhtémoc, Chiapas. Fed. Highway 190's eastern segment ends at a Guatemala-Mexico border crossing at Ciudad Cuauhtémoc. The Pan-American Highway route in southern Mexico continues into Guatemala as Central American Highway 1 (CA-1).

References

  1. "Datos Viales de Coahuila" (PDF) (in Spanish). Dirección General de Servicios Técnicos, Secretaría de Comunicaciones y Transportes. 2011. pp. 7–8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-16. Retrieved 2012-01-28.
  2. "Mapa Nacional de Comunicaciones y Transportes" (PDF). Secretaría de Comunicaciones y Transportes de Mexico. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 26, 2009. Retrieved December 11, 2008.
  3. "Bing Maps" . Retrieved July 1, 2010.