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N15

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10-678: N15 may refer to: Roads [ edit ] N15 road (Belgium) , a National Road in Belgium Route nationale 15 , in France N15 road (Ireland) A15 motorway (Netherlands) Nebraska Highway 15 , in the United States Vehicles [ edit ] HMS  Triton  (N15) , a submarine of the Royal Navy LNER Class N15 ,

20-636: A British 0-6-2 steam locomotive class LSWR N15 class , a British 4-6-0 steam locomotive Nissan Almera (N15) , a Japanese automobile sold in Europe Nissan Pulsar (N15) , a Japanese automobile sold domestically Other uses [ edit ] N15 (Long Island bus) , New York Enterobacteria phage N15 Kingston Airport (Nevada) , in Lander County, Nevada, United States London Buses route N15 Nitrogen-15 , an isotope of nitrogen Tonga language (Malawi) N15,

30-592: A postcode district in the N postcode area See also [ edit ] 15N (disambiguation) [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title formed as a letter–number combination. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=N15&oldid=1133768820 " Category : Letter–number combination disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

40-502: Is Province of Hainaut ; 6 is Province of Liège ; 7 is Province of Limburg ; 8 is Province of Luxemburg ; and 9 is Province of Namur . Due to linguistic differences, the national road N58 took more than twenty years to build. It does not actually run from Dottignies to Armentières as anticipated because the road is split into two sections: the first stretches from Armentières in France up to Menen where it joins onto

50-473: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages List of National Roads in Belgium The national roads of Belgium are roads that cover the whole of the country; some of the roads are provincial and communal. The use of the national roads is free; they are open to all vehicles, but some are for cars only. Since the second state reform in 1980,

60-462: The NIS code of the provinces. Some short roads have the number of another N road suffixed with a letter of the alphabet. These are usually a short road connecting to an N road, a part of that N road, or a road that can be taken as an alternative to that N road. The first network consists of national roads, each starting from the capital Brussels and forming a clockwise star. The second network groups

70-450: The A19 motorway; the other part starts in the village of Dronkaard to the southeast of Menen, and ends in the village of Dottignies. The fourth network consists of national secondary roads. The first digit corresponds to the province, as for the third network. NIS code The NIS code ( Dutch : NIS-code, French: code INS) is a numeric code for regional areas of Belgium . This code

80-639: The N2 is known as the "Road to Leuven" ("Chaussée de Louvain" in French, "Leuvensesteenweg" in Dutch). The numbering of the roads is grouped into four networks of roads: Most of the roads of the third and fourth networks have a first digit that identifies the province: N1xx for Antwerp, N2xx for ex Brabant, N3xx for West Flanders, N4xx for East Flanders, N5xx for Hainaut, N6xx for Liège, N7xx for Limburg, N8xx for Luxemburg and N9xx for Namur. This first digit corresponds with

90-424: The national roads that are linked to major cities and towns of Belgium, excluding Brussels. The third network is composed of provincial national roads. The first digit corresponds to a province—from 1 to 9—based upon the old provinces and in alphabetical order in French, thus: 1 is Province of Antwerp ; 2 is Province of Brabant ; 3 is Province of West Flanders ; 4 is Province of East Flanders ; 5

100-471: The networks of national roads have been managed by the federal regions, depending on the region in which they are located. In general the road names are linked to the surrounding areas; most of these are linked to historical references. For example, the N3 around Liège is known as the "Road to Brussels" in the west of the city and the "Road to Fléron" in the east of the city. Another example is around Brussels, where

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