Queues up to 3 kilometers long but
little inconvenience at various points of the Upper Adriatic
Motorways network, gateway in and out for tourists heading to or
returning to Croatia and Slovenia. It's the black dot Saturday
as expected, registering overall plus two percent transits,
meaning that compared to the same Saturday last year, when 190
thousand vehicles transited, today's day is expected to end with
about 200 thousand vehicles transited.
A large number of tourists from Germany and Austria chose the
A23 to reach the seaside resorts of Lower Friuli or, for those
heading across the border, to then continue on the A4, passing
through Trieste. It is here, at the capital's toll gate, Lisert,
that there is the nodal point of the entire network. And it is
here that there is a three-kilometer queue both inbound and
outbound (these are tourists returning from Croatia). So many
are also Italian tourists, coming in. The queue at Lisert
triggered the recommended exit protocol at Villesse, where,
therefore, another queue formed, also three kilometers long.
A queue formed at times between Meolo and Portogruaro on the
A4 and at the San Donà exit apron: these are those heading to
Jesolo and other seaside resorts. Queues are registered at the
entrance to Latisana: these are those returning from Lignano.
The intensity of transits is 3,000/hour in the East Venice
area and 3,000/hour in the San Giorgio and Palmanova area, both
in the direction of Trieste and in the direction of Tarvisio:
many are in fact those returning to Austria, many those heading
to the mountains (Tarvisio) and many more those going to seaside
resorts. On the A23 where, as mentioned, German-speaking
tourists from the North travel, 2,300/hour transits are recorded
between Udine Sud and Palmanova.
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