Strada statale 35 dei Giovi

Strada statale 35 dei Giovi is an Italian state highway, which connects Genoa and the Italian Riviera with Como and the Canton of Ticino, passing through Pavia and Milan. The road begins in Genoa in the Sampierdarena district where it constitutes an important urban crossing artery with the Reti and Fillak streets, and then ends in Como more precisely at the Customs House in Ponte Chiasso on the border with Switzerland. Between Tortona and Casteggio the SS 35 is in common with the strada statale 10, while the Milan-Cermenate section is a Superstrada, built around the 1960s known as Superstrada Milano-Meda.

State Highway 35 shield}}
State Highway 35
Strada statale 35
Giovi
Route information
Maintained by ANAS
Length172.800 km (107.373 mi)
Existed1928–present
Major junctions
FromGenoa
ToPonte Chiasso, Como
Location
CountryItaly
RegionsLiguria, Piedmont, Lombardy
Highway system
  • Roads in Italy

History

Strada statale 35 dei Giovi was established in 1928 with the following route: "From Genoa to Ronco Scrivia - Serravalle to Tortona, with a branch from Serravalle to Spinetta Marengo near Alessandria and from Casteggio to Pavia - Milan - Asnago - Como on the Swiss border towards Chiasso".[1]

Following the legislative decree n. 112 of 1998, in 2001, the management passed from ANAS to the regional governments of Liguria, Piedmont and Lombardy Region, which have further devolved the competences to their respective provinces, as there is no regional road classification in these regions.

In 2018, the Ligurian section of the road was once again included in the road network of national interest, thus restoring its classification as a state road.[2][3] In 2021, the same happened to the Piemontese section and a little section in Lombardy.[3]

In the Milanese area, the road follows two historic arteries: in the northern section, in fact, the road already existed in the Middle Ages as the backbone of the communications of the Duchy of Milan, where it was known as the Dergano road, which in modern times became the Comasina.[4][5]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.