Federal Route 19 and 5 | |
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Lebuh AMJ (Alor Gajah-Central Malacca-Jasin Highway) |
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Route information | |
Existed: | 2001 – present |
History: | Completed in 2007 |
Major junctions | |
Northwest end: | Bulatan Taboh Naning, Melaka |
North-South Expressway Southern Route Jalan Lama Alor Gajah Federal Route 61 Federal Route 139 Jalan Taboh Naning Federal Route 142 Federal Route 140 Lebuh SPA Federal Route 144 Federal Route 264 Federal Route 5 Federal Route 23 Muar Bypass |
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Southeast end: | Parit Bunga, Ledang, Johor |
Location | |
Primary destinations: |
Simpang Ampat Tampin Alor Gajah Batu Berendam Malacca Town Umbai Merlimau |
Highway system | |
Lebuhraya Alor Gajah-Melaka Tengah-Jasin (Alor Gajah-Central Malacca-Jasin Highway), or popularly known as Lebuh AMJ (Alor Gajah - Central Malacca (Malacca) - Jasin), Federal Routes 19 (Malaccan side) and 5 (Johorean side) is a divided highway across Malacca state, Malaysia.
Generally, the Lebuh AMJ runs north-south from Simpang Ampat to Malacca City before running from west-east from Malacca City to Muar. The entire Malaccan section of the Lebuh AMJ is signed as Federal Route 19, while the Johorean section of the highway is signed as Federal Route 5. The route numbers overlap along the section between Sungai Duyong Intersection to Semabok Interchange. Meanwhile, the section between Malim and Semabok was signed as Federal Route 191 but was decommissioned in 2012 when the entire Lebuh AMJ was gazetted as FT19.
The Kilometre Zero of the Federal Route 19 used to be located at Jalan Hang Tuah-Jalan Kubu intersection in Malacca City. After the Lebuh AMJ was gazetted as the Federal Route 19 in 2012, the Kilometre Zero was moved to Jalan Lama Kesang Intersection at Kesang, Johor.
Lebuh AMJ was constructed due to the traffic congestion along the former Federal Routes 19 (Melaka-Simpang Ampat) and 5 (Melaka-Muar). The Simpang Ampat-Malim section of the highway was constructed as an upgrade of the existing Federal Route 19 route, while the Sungai Duyong-Kesang section of the highway was built as an entirely new route. The project was started from 2001 and was completed in 2007 with the total cost of RM505 million. Three interchanges were built along the highway, namely Semabok Interchange, Al Azim Interchange and Malim Jaya Interchange. The entire Lebuh AMJ was opened to traffic on 29 June 2007.