*** Welcome to piglix ***

N2 road (Ireland)

N2 road shield}}

N2 road
Route information
Length: 133.01 km (82.65 mi)
Location
Primary
destinations:

(bypassed routes in italics)

Road network

M2 motorway shield}}

M2 motorway
N2 road M2 motorway M1 motorway M50 motorway M3 motorway M4 motorway N32 road N2 road N3 road N1 road M50 motorway N11 road N4 road N7 road M50 motorway N31 road M50 motorway M11 motorway N11 roadM2 motorway (Ireland).png
About this image

Mano cursor.svg Clickable image
Route information
Part of M2 motorway IE.png
Length: 13 km (8 mi)
Existed: 2004 – present
History: Completed in 2006
Major junctions
From: Killshane
  N2
Road network

N2 road shield}}

(bypassed routes in italics)

The N2 road is a national primary road in Ireland, running from Dublin to the border with Northern Ireland at Moy Bridge near Aughnacloy, County Tyrone to connect Dublin with Derry via the A5. A section of the route near Dublin forms the M2 motorway.

The N2 commences at junction 5 of the M50 motorway. It then runs as a dual-carriageway for 17 km (10.5 miles) from the M50 to north of Ashbourne, County Meath. This project was opened on 25 May 2006, and includes 3.5 km (2.2 miles) of three lane dual carriageway built to motorway standard. The route is the first to have a 120 km/h (75 mph) special speed limit (this was previously reserved for motorways, see Road speed limits in the Republic of Ireland for particulars). 13 km (8.1 miles) of this dual carriageway stretch became motorway on 28 August 2009. (see M2 motorway).

The route continues through Balrath towards Slane, where a dangerous bridge brings the road through the town by the historic Hill of Slane, now home to the occasional rock festival. The N2 continues through Collon in County Louth. Just after Ardee the N2 meets the N33, which connects the N2 to the nearby M1 motorway. North of this, in County Monaghan, the N2 bypasses Carrickmacross to the east, along a bypass opened on 21 January 2005. This 9 km wide single carriageway has been named The Kavanagh Way, after Monaghan writer and poet Patrick Kavanagh. The route by-passes Castleblayney and Clontibret on the way to Monaghan. North of Monaghan town, the N12 diverges east to the border. The N2 continues north through Emyvale to reach the border at Moy Bridge directly south of Aughnacloy, County Tyrone. From here, the road becomes the A5 road to Omagh and Derry.


...
Wikipedia

...