Prefectural road

(Redirected from Todofukendo)

Prefectural roads (都道府県道, todōfukendō, singular depending on the type of prefecture: todō, dōdō, fudō or kendō) in Japan are roads usually planned, numbered and maintained by the government of the respective prefecture (-to, -dō, -fu or -ken), independent of other prefectures – as opposed to national roads (kokudō), which in legal terms include national expressways (kōsoku jidōsha kokudō), and municipal roads ([ku]shichōsondō). Where a national or prefectural road runs through the territory of a designated major city, the city government assumes part of the responsibility for these roads. By length, 10.7 % of public roads in Japan were prefectural roads as of 2011; by usage, they carried more than 30% of all traffic volume on public roads as of 2007.[1]

Prefectural and municipal border signs and road number sign on the Saitama Prefectural Road 9 (Saitama-kendō 9[-gō], 埼玉県道9[号])

Prefectural roads are marked with a blue hexagon, with the number centered. Most usually end at another prefectural road, or national route, or occasionally at or very close to a Japan Railway station.

Numbers are used only once in each prefecture, regardless of where the road begins or ends. If a prefectural road crosses into another prefecture, its number is not necessarily reused by the prefecture it crosses into, but many prefectural roads running through multiple prefectures are coordinated to share a number. For example, the "Fuchū-Sagamihara Line" (fuchuu-sagamihara-sen, 府中相模原線), which connects Fuchū City in Tokyo and Sagamihara City in Kanagawa Prefecture, starts as Tokyo Prefectural Road 20 but ends as Kanagawa Prefectural Road 525, while the "Sano-Koga line" (sano-koga-sen, 佐野古河線), which connects Sano City in Tochigi Prefecture and Koga City in Ibaraki Prefecture, is continually designated as Prefectural Road 9 in all four prefectures it runs through, namely Tochigi, Gunma, Saitama and Ibaraki.

Some prefectural roads will also at times run for a short distance concurrent with a national route, but it is more common to see this with other prefectural roads.

Numbers used for national routes that run through a prefecture are often duplicated by prefectural routes but a national route and a prefectural route bearing the same number rarely if ever meet or cross each other.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ MLIT (Kokudo-kōtsū-shō), Road bureau (dōro-kyoku): Road definition & classification
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