frontage road
A frontage road runs alongside the highway, providing access to several small shops.
Noun: A local road that runs parallel to a major, limited-access highway (such as an expressway or freeway). Its primary purpose is to provide access to adjacent properties (like businesses, homes, or other developments) without interrupting the high-speed traffic flow on the main highway.
A frontage road is a specific type of service road. It is used to describe the smaller, parallel road that handles local entry and exit, separating local traffic from through traffic. - The new shopping center is accessible from the frontage road. - To reach the hotel, take the exit and then follow the frontage road for half a mile.
- The term is often used in urban planning, civil engineering, and transportation contexts.
- It can be part of a one-way pair (with one frontage road handling traffic in each direction) or a two-way road.
- In some regions, "service road" or "access road" are common synonyms, though "frontage road" specifically implies it runs along the of the properties facing the highway.
- Service Road: A more general term for a road that provides access to properties along a major road. All frontage roads are service roads, but not all service roads are strictly parallel frontage roads.
- Access Road: A road that provides entry to a specific area or property; it may not necessarily run parallel to a highway.
- Service Road
- Access Road (in this specific context)
- Parallel Road
- Feeder Road
- Expressway: The high-speed, limited-access highway from which the frontage road provides an alternative.
- Throughway / Thruway: A road for through traffic, which the frontage road is designed to avoid.
A frontage road runs alongside the highway, providing access to several small shops.
- a local road that runs parallel to an expressway and allows local traffic to gain access to property