Mexican Federal Highway 180

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mexican_Federal_Highway_180 an entity of type: Thing

La Carretera Federal 180 comunica la ciudad de Matamoros en el estado de Tamaulipas, México, con la ciudad de Cancún en el estado de Quintana Roo, en el extremo oriental de la república mexicana, transcurriendo a lo largo de la costa del golfo de México la mayor parte del trayecto. Su trayecto es: rdf:langString
Federal Highway 180 is a Mexican Federal Highway that follows Mexico's Gulf and Caribbean Coast from the Mexico-U.S. border at Brownsville, Texas, into Matamoros, Tamaulipas, to the resort city of Cancún, Quintana Roo, in the Yucatán Peninsula. Although the highway is numbered as a west-east route, it initially follows a north-south alignment through Tamaulipas and Veracruz. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Carretera Federal 180
rdf:langString Mexican Federal Highway 180
xsd:integer 17377888
xsd:integer 1102688986
rdf:langString MEX
rdf:langString East
rdf:langString West
rdf:langString in Buenavista, Veracruz
xsd:double 2240.92
xsd:integer 180
rdf:langString in Cancún, Quintana Roo
rdf:langString in Matamoros, Tamaulipas
rdf:langString FH
rdf:langString La Carretera Federal 180 comunica la ciudad de Matamoros en el estado de Tamaulipas, México, con la ciudad de Cancún en el estado de Quintana Roo, en el extremo oriental de la república mexicana, transcurriendo a lo largo de la costa del golfo de México la mayor parte del trayecto. En su recorrido cruza por 6 estados de la república mexicana. La mayor parte del trazo corresponde a la costa del Golfo, pero a partir de la ciudad de Campeche se adentra en la península de Yucatán hasta llegar a Mérida, para posteriormente cruzarla de oeste a este hasta el término del trazo, en la población de Puerto Juárez, estado de Quintana Roo.​ Su trayecto es:
rdf:langString Federal Highway 180 is a Mexican Federal Highway that follows Mexico's Gulf and Caribbean Coast from the Mexico-U.S. border at Brownsville, Texas, into Matamoros, Tamaulipas, to the resort city of Cancún, Quintana Roo, in the Yucatán Peninsula. Although the highway is numbered as a west-east route, it initially follows a north-south alignment through Tamaulipas and Veracruz. The highway is briefly interrupted from El Encinal to Soto la Marina in Tamaulipas just north of Tampico. The highway goes through Tampico south, interrupted briefly from Cerro Azul to Potrero del Llano, to the city of Poza Rica. It continues south from there through Veracruz and Coatzacoalcos. From there it goes east into Villahermosa, north through Campeche into Mérida, and finally east into Cancún. Highway 180 connects at the Mexico–United States border with U.S. Route 83, one of the longest north-south U.S. Highways in the United States at 1,885 miles (3,034 km). Federal Highway 180 also connects to both Interstate 69E and U.S. Route 77 at the border. U.S. Route 83 (along with both Interstate 69E and U.S. Route 77) starts the northern terminus of Highway 180 in Brownsville, Texas, at the Veterans International Bridge on the Mexican border. After crossing the bridge into the United States, Federal Highway 180 continues as U.S. Route 83 in Brownsville which then runs northward to the U.S. highway's northern terminus, north of Westhope, North Dakota, at the Canada–United States border. From here, the highway continues further as Manitoba Highway 83 until it ends at Swan River, Manitoba. In total, the three highways total 5,691 kilometres (3,536 mi) in length.
xsd:integer 2
xsd:integer 182
rdf:langString FH
xsd:integer 179
rdf:langString FH
<kilometre> 2240.92
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4961
xsd:double 2240920.0
xsd:string West
xsd:string 180
xsd:string East
xsd:string FH

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