Bundesstraße 242

B 242 shield}}
B 242
Bundesstraße 242
Route information
Length124 km (77 mi)
Major junctions
East endSeesen
Major intersections
Route Map
 Seesen B 248
 Herrhausen
 Münchehof
Motor road
Motor road
Kraftfahrstraße
Münchehof B 243
common route with the B 243
Münchehof-Süd B 243
End of the motor road
End of the motor road
end of motor road
Diversion
Diversion
Bad Grund local diversion

Harz unincorporated area

 Clausthal-Zellerfeld B 241

B 498

common route with the B 498
 Dammhaus B 498
 Sonnenberg

B 4

common route with the B 4
Braunlage-Nord
Motor road
Motor road
Kraftfahrstraße
parking area
Braunlage-Mitte B 27

Hasselkopf Tunnel (220 m)

End of the motor road
End of the motor road
end of motor road
Braunlage-Süd

B 4

 Sorge
Trans-Harz Railway
 Tanne
 Trautenstein
 Hasselfelde B 81
 Stiege
Selke Valley Railway
 Güntersberge
 Siptenfelde
 Alexisbad B 185
 Harzgerode
 Königerode
 Leimbach B 86
Mansfeld Castle
 Klostermansfeld B 180
West endMansfeld
Location
CountryGermany
StatesLower Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt
Highway system
  • Roads in Germany
  • Autobahns
    • List
  • Federal
    • List

The B 242 is a federal highway (German: Bundesstraße) in Germany. It runs from Seesen to Mansfeld.[1]

Route

The B 242, also known as the Harz High Road (Harzhochstraße), runs right across the Harz mountains in central Germany. From Seesen on the northwestern edge of the Harz near the A 7 motorway it runs through the Upper Harz past Clausthal-Zellerfeld, the High Harz, where it is combined for several kilometres with the B 4, past Braunlage and then through the eastern Harz foothills into Mansfelder Land. There it joins the B 180 east of Klostermansfeld.

An extension of the B 242 via Polleben and Salzmünde to Halle (Saale) is being planned.

Rivers crossed

  • Innerste
  • Oderteich
  • Warme Bode, near Sorge
  • Hassel between Hasselfelde and Stiege
  • Selke near Alexisbad
  • Wipper in Mansfeld

Photographs

See also

  • List of federal roads in Germany

References

  1. "Bundesstraßenverzeichnis, Ausgabe 2009 (BVERZ 2009)" (PDF). Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen (in German). Federal Ministry for Digital and Transport. 30 October 2009. p. 239. Retrieved 28 November 2024.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.