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The N11 road is a national primary road in Ireland, running for along the east side of Ireland from Dublin to Wexford.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Roads Act 1993 (Classification of National Roads) Order 2006 )〕 It passes close to Bray, Greystones, Wicklow, Arklow and Gorey and also passes through Enniscorthy, amongst others. Beyond Wexford, the route continues to Rosslare as the N25. The road forms part of European route E01. the N11/M11 is of dual carriageway or motorway standard from Dublin as far as Gorey in County Wexford. The road is a busy commuter route, being the only dual carriageway passing through the south eastern suburbs of Dublin, as well as close to the many commuter towns along the east coast as far south as Gorey. Summer Friday and Sunday evenings also see very heavy traffic as Dubliners decamp to, and return from, their many holiday home locations along the Co. Wicklow and Co. Wexford coastlines. ==Original route out of and into Dublin== The N11 commenced where it met the N4 on the south end of ''O'Connell Bridge'' in Dublin city centre. The route proceeded along ''D'Olier Street'', ''College Street'' (and in the opposite direction, ''Westmoreland Street''). The route continued around ''College Green'' and ''Grafton Street'' (and in the other direction, ''Suffolk Street'', ''Church Lane'' and ''Dame Street''). From here, the route continued out of the city via ''Nassau Street'', ''Kildare Street'', North side of ''St. Stephen's Green'', ''Merrion Row'', ''Baggot Street Lower'', ''Pembroke Street Lower'', ''Fitzwilliam Square West'' and ''Pembroke Street Upper''. This route section in the other direction (into the city centre) ran via ''Leeson Street Lower'', East and North sides of ''St. Stephen's Green'' and ''Dawson Street''. The N11 ran in both directions along ''Leeson Street Lower'' after the junction with ''Pembroke Street''. Having crossed the Grand Canal the route divided again for a portion of ''Leeson Street Upper'', with outbound traffic proceeding via ''Sussex Road''. The route continued via ''Morehampton Road'' and ''Donnybrook Road'', through Donnybrook, with the route becoming dual carriageway at Donnybrook Church, which marks the beginning of the ''Stillorgan Road''. The ''Stillorgan Road'' brought the road past Belfield, where University College Dublin is located (and accessed from a grade-separated interchange on the dual carriageway - the first full interchange built in Ireland) and onwards to its junction with Mount Merrion Avenue. This former section of the N11 is now the R138. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「N11 road (Ireland)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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