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  1. Mexican Federal Highway 5. Federal Highway 5 ( Spanish: Carretera Federal 5, Fed. 5) is a tollfree part of the federal highways corridors ( Spanish: los corredores carreteros federales ), and follows the northeast length of the state of Baja California from the US-Mexico border in Mexicali at the northern point at San Felipe in the south.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Interstate_5Interstate 5 - Wikipedia

    Interstate 5 I-5 highlighted in red Route information Length 1,381.29 mi (2,222.97 km) Existed 1956–present History Completed in 1979 NHS Entire route Major junctions South end Fed. 1 / Fed. 1D at the Mexican border in San Diego, CA Major intersections SR 15 in San Diego, CA I-8 in San Diego, CA I-10 / US 101 in Los Angeles, CA US 50 in Sacramento, CA I-80 in Sacramento, CA US 20 in Albany ...

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  4. Federal Highway 5 is a tollfree part of the federal highways corridors, and follows the northeast length of the state of Baja California from the US-Mexico border in Mexicali at the northern point at San Felipe in the south. The highway is entirely inside the Mexicali Municipality. However, a state highway from San Felipe to Puertecitos is usually considered part of Fed. 5. From San Felipe to ...

  5. The highway continues as Mexico Federal Hwy 1/D along the Pacific Coast towards Ensenada from Las Playas in Tijuana. In the north, I-5 begins/ends at the US/Canadian border crossing at Peach Arch Park in Blaine, Washington. From the border crossing, the freeway continues the next 25 mi (40 km) north to the Oak Street Bridge, over the Fraser ...

  6. www.wikiwand.com › en › Interstate_5Interstate 5 - Wikiwand

    Interstate 5 (I-5) is the main north–south Interstate Highway on the West Coast of the United States, running largely parallel to the Pacific Coast of the contiguous U.S. from Mexico to Canada. It travels through the states of California, Oregon, and Washington, serving several large cities on the West Coast, including San Diego, Los Angeles, Sacramento, Portland, and Seattle. It is the only ...

  7. At this point it becomes a two-lane highway (with little or no shoulder in most areas) until km 160, about 18 km (11 mi) south of the junction with Mexican Federal Highway 3, and about 40 km (24 mi) north of San Felipe. From there, the highway is a broad, divided, four-lane highway with a median and ample shoulders, until it ends in San Felipe.

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