The European route E 313 is a road in Europe and a part of the United Nations International E-road network. Approximately 112 kilometers (70 mi) long, it connects the Belgian port city of Antwerp to Liège,[1] the commercial and industrial centre of Wallonia. It runs thus entirely within Belgium: however, it does cross the language frontier within Belgium between the Dutch speaking Flanders and the French speaking Wallonia which affects the roadside route signs and safety-message posters. From the junction at Ranst where it splits from the E 34, it follows the Belgian A13.

E313 shield
E313
European routes in Belgium with E313 in bright green
Route information
Length130 km (81 mi)
Major junctions
FromAntwerp
ToLiège
Location
Countries Belgium
Highway system

It also serves the same industrial belt as the Albert Canal, the route of which generally runs close to the E 313. For much of the western end of the road the width of the strip of land between the road and the waterway is too narrow for residential use, and the land has instead been put to good use for industrial developments, notably in the area of Herentals. The other major city served by the E 313 is Hasselt, the capital of the Belgian province of Limburg.

Characterised at the end of the 20th century by its poor surface, much of the road was renovated at the start of the 21st century. The E 313 is an autoroute quality road, though east of the split with the E 34 it still has only two lanes in each direction.

The route

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E 313 Antwerp (Antwerpen, Anvers) - Liège (Luik, Lüttich)
State National
Road
Number
Section Junction
(national numbering)
Pan European road connections
     

......Province
Antwerp   A13 Antwerp east - Ranst A 13        Antwerp east towards, Antwerp, Brussels, Ghent, Bruges,   Netherlands (Bergen op Zoom and Breda)
A 13   18 Wommelgem
A 13     Ranst
A 13     Ranst east towards   Netherlands (Eindhoven)


E 19



& doubling with
E 34
Antwerp







Limburg
  A13 Ranst - Lummen A 13   19 Massenhoven
A 13   20 Herentals west
A 13   21 Herentals Industrial zone
A 13   22 Herentals east
A 13   23 Geel west
A 13   24 Geel east
A 13   25 Ham
A 13   25a Tessenderlo
A 13     Tessenderlo
A 13   26 Beringen
A 13     Lummen towards Brussels, Leuven, Genk and   Netherlands (Heerlen)


















E 314
Limburg   A13 Lummen - Tongeren (Tongres) A 13   26bis Lummen & Zolder
A 13   27 Hasselt west
A 13   28 Hasselt south
A 13   29 Hasselt east
A 13   30 Diepenbeek west
A 13   31 Bilzen & Hoeselt
A 13   32 Tongeren (Tongres)
     
Liège   A13 Tongres (Tongeren) - Vottem A 13   33 Boirs
A 13   Fexhe-Slins
A 13   34 Liers
A 13       Vottem towards Brussels Leuven, Namur, Charleroi,   Luxembourg (Luxembourg City),   Netherlands (Maastricht), Eupen, Verviers and   Germany (Aachen and Trier)
A 13   35 Vottem





E 25, E 40, E 42

References

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  1. ^ "European Agrement on Main International Traffic Arteries (AGR)" (PDF). United Nations Economic Commission for Europe. 14 March 2008. Retrieved 23 November 2024.
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