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wegnet

Wegnet is a term used to describe the road network within a country or region. It encompasses the interconnected system of roads, streets, and supporting infrastructure that enables land transport for people and goods. A wegnet typically includes major highways, arterial roads, collector roads, and local streets, along with associated elements such as bridges, tunnels, interchanges, roundabouts, and access points.

The wegnet is usually organized by a functional hierarchy that reflects traffic flow and accessibility. Arterials

Management and data about the wegnet are typically maintained by public authorities at national, regional, and

Planning and policy focus on improving accessibility, efficiency, safety, and sustainability within the wegnet. This includes

See also: road classification, transport network, geographic information systems.

carry
through
traffic
and
provide
high-capacity
routes
between
urban
areas.
Collectors
gather
traffic
from
local
streets
and
distribute
it
to
arterials,
while
local
roads
give
direct
access
to
properties.
The
network’s
performance
depends
on
the
design
and
operation
of
intersections,
interchanges,
and
traffic
management
devices,
as
well
as
the
availability
of
multimodal
connections.
municipal
levels.
Road
registries,
planning
documents,
and
traffic
inventories
record
geometry,
length,
speed
limits,
capacity,
restrictions,
and
maintenance
status.
Open
data
initiatives
and
mapping
platforms,
including
crowdsourced
sources,
contribute
to
the
current
understanding
of
the
wegnet.
In
transport
analysis,
the
wegnet
is
modeled
as
a
graph
with
nodes
representing
intersections
and
edges
representing
road
segments,
enabling
calculations
of
connectivity,
traffic
flow,
and
network
resilience.
maintenance
scheduling,
capacity
expansion,
incident
management,
and
the
integration
of
public
transit,
cycling,
and
pedestrian
networks.