Jayu-ro

Jayu-ro

Jayu-ro

Highway in South Korea


The Jayu Motorway (also called Jayu-ro, Korean: 자유로, lit. Freedom Road) is a major north–south arterial highway in South Korea. Its southern terminus is in Seoul, while its northern terminus is at National Route 1's Reunification Bridge leading into the DMZ. North Korea is visible from a section of the highway stretching from Seongdong-ri to Ogeum-ri. Its shape closely parallels the northern bank of the Han River and is heavily fortified with barbed wire and military observatories. It is part of National Route 77.

Quick Facts Route information, Length ...
Jayuro northbound as viewed from Odusan Observatory. North Korea is visible in the center upper-left portion
Gusan IC, 2008
Bound for Gaeseong, 2008

This route connects Seoul (Gayang Bridge), Goyang (Ilsan) to Paju (Munsan, Panmunjeom), with a total length of 49.976 km (31.054 mi).

The highway is directly connected with the Gangbyeonbuk-ro at Gayang Bridge.

History

  • May 19, 1990 - Construction Begin
  • August, 1992 - Haengju Bridge~Tongil observatory section(29 km) opens to traffic.
  • September, 1994 - Tongil observatory~Jayu Bridge(자유의다리) section(17.5 km) opens to traffic.

Compositions

Lanes

  • Dangdong IC ~ Jayu IC: 4
  • Nakha IC - Dangdong IC: 6
  • Nakha IC - Isanpo JC: 8
  • Gayang Bridge - Isanpo JC: 10

Length

49.976 km (31.054 mi)

Speed limits

  • 90 km/h

List of facilities

  • IC: Interchange, JC: Junction, SA: Service Area, TG:Tollgate
More information No., Name ...

Jayuro Ghost

The highway is also notable for its variant of the vanishing hitchhiker called the Jayuro Ghost. The area frequently experiences foggy weather and thus has a high rate of automobile collisions. According to the narrative, a woman can sometimes be seen along the side of the road wearing sunglasses. Upon closer inspection it is revealed that the so-called sunglasses are actually the woman's gouged-out eyes. Another version of the narrative has a driver picking up the ghost, only for the ghost to direct the driver to a cemetery or disappear when the driver reaches the destination. The Dark Side of Seoul Podcast released a video episode about this urban legend and other road-related Korean folklore.[1]

See also


References

  1. "Ghost Stories on Jayuro Highway | the Dark Side of Seoul Podcast - YouTube". YouTube.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Jayu-ro, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.