Author Topic: Singapore/Malaysia AH2 alignment  (Read 283 times)

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Offline neroute2

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Singapore/Malaysia AH2 alignment
« on: August 16, 2023, 08:03:52 pm »
How sure are we about the alignment of SGP AH2? I have found the following sources:
https://www.unescap.org/our-work/transport/asian-highway/database (2015, latest available for Singapore): shows it following BKE to the south end, but then turning west on PIE to 26A and south on Clementi Road, crossing AYE at 9 to end at West Coast Highway
https://agreement.asean.org/media/download/20180207145327.pdf (2018): shows the above as 2 (East) and a 2 (West) using AYE west of 9 and Clementi Road to end at West Coast Highway
https://www.lta.gov.sg/content/ltagov/en/newsroom/2019/7/2/asean-transit-transport-route-signs-to-be-installed.html (2019): states that Singapore was installing signs for 2 (East) and 2 (West) - and here it is! Others also appear as shown: AH2(E), AH2(E), AH2(W), AH2(W), AH2
So this pretty much confirms the above, except that the overlap south of AYE is simply AH2, which extends just south of West Coast Highway to West Coast Ferry Road.

I also see no evidence that AH143 exists in Singapore. And in Malaysia, AH2 is signed along what we have as AH143. The sole Wikipedia source for AH143 is from 2010 and states "Final route numbering between Malaysia and Singapore is subject to consultation between both countries." The above 2018 link that created 2(E) and 2(W) is said consultation. (Incidentally, that 2010 note also applies to AH18 in Malaysia. The 2010 database shows AH18 using Federal 3 all the way south to the border, but this is from before the Johor Bahru Eastern Dispersal Link Expressway opened in 2012.)

Offline si404

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Re: Singapore/Malaysia AH2 alignment
« Reply #1 on: August 17, 2023, 04:47:50 am »
Thanks for this, this is very helpful. I'll implement this.

Malaysia and Singapore disagreed over the routing of AH2 (and consequently AH143) with each taking the opposite route - for simplicity I went with Singapore's routings (as the UNECE seemed to). This 2018 (some time after drafting) decision to have W and E routings of AH2 meant both nations could be happy.

ASEAN Highway Network was defined here, in 1999, https://cil.nus.edu.sg/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/1999-Ministerial-Understanding-on-the-Development-of-the-ASEAN-Highway-Network-Project-Annexes.pdf but without numbering. IIRC, there used to be a map that backed up wikipedia's numbering of the ASEAN routes.