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A high-speed toll booth on SR 417 near Orlando, Florida </div A high-speed toll booth on SR 417 near Orlando, Florida
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A toll gate on the Sayama bypass (Saitama prefectural road 397) in Japan </div A toll gate on the Sayama bypass (Saitama prefectural road 397) in Japan

A toll road, turnpike or tollpike is a road on which a toll authority collects a fee for use. Similarly there are toll bridges and toll tunnels. Other non-toll roads are financed using other sources of revenue, most typically gasoline tax or general tax funds. Tolls have been placed on roads at various times in history, often to generate funds for repayment of toll revenue bonds used to finance constructions and/or operation.

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Early toll roads

Early references include the (mythical) Greek ferryman Charon charging a toll to ferry (dead) people across the river Acheron. Aristotle and Pliny refer to tolls in Arabia and other parts of Asia. In India, before the 4th century BC the Arthasastra notes the use of tolls. Germanic tribes charged tolls to travelers across mountain passes. Tolls were used in the Holy Roman Empire in the 14th century and 15th century.

A good example in the 14th century would be Castle Loevestein in the Netherlands, which was built at a strategic point where 2 rivers met, and charged tolls to boats sailing the river.

Toll roads in the United Kingdom

Until the seventeenth century most roads in England, other than surviving Roman roads, were simple tracks through the earth, the term road indicating no more than a right of passage. Responsibility for the upkeep of the roads rested with three groups, the King (the King's Highways), the aristocracy owning the land over which the roads ran and the monasteries.

The great land-owning monasteries were the most active in road and also bridge maintenance. The dissolution of the monasteries under Henry VIII greatly reduced the quality of the roads.

Parliament passed the upkeep of bridges to local settlements or the containing county under the 1531 Statute of Bridges and in 1555 the care of roads was similarly devolved to the parishes as statute labour. Every adult inhabitant of the parish was obliged to work four consecutive days a year on the roads, providing their own tools, carts and horses. The work was overseen by an unpaid local appointee, the Surveyor of Highways. It was not until 1654 that road rates were introduced. However, the improvements offered by paid labour were offset by the rise in the use of wheeled vehicles greatly increasing wear to the road surfaces. The government reaction to this was to use legislation to limit the use of wheeled vehicles and also to regulate their construction. A vain hope that wider rims would be less damaging briefly led to carts with sixteen inch wheels, they did not cause ruts but neither did they roll and flatten the road as was hoped.

The first turnpike road, whereby travellers paid tolls to be used for road upkeep, was authorised in 1663 for a section of the Great North Road in Hertfordshire. The term turnpike refers to a gate on which sharp pikes would be fixed as a defence against cavalry. Most English gates were not built to this standard; of the first three gates two were found to be easily avoided.

The first turnpike trust was established by Parliament through a Turnpike Act in 1706, placing a section of the London-Coventrya href="Chester%2C_England_8df5.html" title="Chester, England">Chester road in the hands of a group of trustees. The trustees could erect gates as they saw fit, demand statute labour or a cash equivalent, and appoint surveyors and collectors, in return they repaired the road and put up mileposts. Initially trusts were established for limited periods, around twenty years. The expectation was that the trust would borrow the money to repair the road and repay that debt over time with the road then reverting to the local authorities. In reality the initial debt was rarely paid-off and the trusts were renewed as needed. The turnpike trusts were initially set up along the thirteen main roads from London, a process that lasted until 1750. From 1751 until 1772 there was a flurry of interest in turnpike trusts and a further 390 were established. By 1825 over 1,000 trusts controlled 25,000 miles of road in England and Wales.

The quality of early trust roads was very variable - standards for road construction were unknown and while they were better the roads still tended to become easily waterlogged. Road construction improved slowly, initially through the efforts of individual surveyors, such as John Metcalf in Yorkshire in the 1760s. But nineteenth century engineers made great advances, notably Thomas Telford and John Loudon McAdam. The work of Telford on the Holyhead Road in the 1820s reduced the journey time of the London mail coach from 45 hours to just 27 hours, the best mail coach speeds rose from 5-6 mph to 9-10 mph. In 1843 the London to Exeter mail coach could complete the 170 miles in 17 hours.

The rise of railway transport largely halted the improving schemes of the turnpike trusts. The London-Birmingham railway almost instantly halved the tolls income of the Holyhead Road. Unable to earn sufficient from tolls alone the trusts took to requiring taxes from the local parishes. The system was never properly reformed but from the 1870s Parliament stopped renewing the acts and roads began to revert to local authorities, the last trust vanished in 1895.

The Local Government Act, 1888 created county councils and gave them responsibility for maintaining the major roads. The abiding relic of the English toll roads is the number of houses with names like "Turnpike Cottage", and occasional roadname: Turnpike Lane in northern London has given its name to an Underground station.

Today, the only tolls on roads in the United Kingdom are mainly tolled bridges and tunnels (e.g. Dartford Crossing, Severn crossing, Mersey Tunnels, Tyne Tunnel), congestion charging schemes, some small, privately-owned toll roads, (e.g. in Dulwich College), and the recently-built and privately-financed M6 Toll, potentially the first of a new generation of toll roads.

Toll roads in the United States

A toll road in the United States is often called a turnpike. The term turnpike may have originated from the turnstile or gate which blocked passage until the fare was paid at a toll house (or toll booth in current terminology).

History, funding through tolls

The
</div The Matecumbe Keys toll booth on the Overseas Highway in Florida (1938)

In early US history, many individual citizens would gravel nearby stretches of road and collect a fee from people who used that specific stretch. Eventually, companies were formed to build, improve, and maintain a particular section of roadway, and tolls were collected from users to finance the enterprise. The enterprise was usually named to indicate the locale of its roadway, often including the name of one or both of the termini. The word turnpike came into common use in the names of these roadways and companies, and is essentially used interchangeably with toll road in current terminology.

The first major toll road in the United States was the Lancaster Turnpike, built in the 1790s, within Pennsylvania, connecting Philadelphia and Lancaster. In New York State, the Great Western Turnpike was started in Albany in 1799 and eventually extended, by several alternate routes, to the Finger Lakes region. Toll roads peaked in the mid 19th century, and by the turn of the twentieth century most toll roads were taken over by state highway departments. In some instances, a quasi-governmental authority was formed, and toll revenue bonds were issued to raise funds for construction and/or operation of the facility.

With the development, mass production, and popular embrace of the automobile, faster and higher capacity roads were needed. In the 1920s limited access highways appeared. Their main characteristics were dual roadways with access points limited to (but not always) grade-separated interchanges. Their dual roadways allowed high volumes of traffic, the need for no or few traffic lights along with relatively gentle grades and curves allowed higher speeds. Bicyclists also campaigned for good roads early on.

The first limited access highways were Parkways, so called because of their often park-like landscaping and, in the metropolitan New York City area, they connected the region's system of parks. When the German Autobahns built in the 1930s introduced higher design standards and speeds, road planners and road-builders in the United States started developing and building toll roads to similar high standards. The Pennsylvania Turnpike, which largely followed the path of a partially-built railroad, was the first of these, opening in 1940 and starting a resurgence of toll collection, this time to fund limited access highways.

In the late 1940s and early 1950s, after an interruption by World War II, the US resumed building toll roads, but to even higher standards. One of these roads, the New York State Thruway, had standards that became the prototype for the U.S. Interstate Highway System. Several other major toll-roads which connected with the Pennsylvania Turnpike were established before the creation of the Interstate Highway System. These were the Illinois Tollway, Indiana Toll Road, Massachusetts Turnpike, Ohio Turnpike, and New Jersey Turnpike. Kentucky has an extensive system of parkways, built in the 1960s and 1970s, which began as toll roads; only two of the nine roads still collect tolls, as state law requires toll collection to cease once the road's construction bonds are paid off. Oklahoma also has an extensive system of turnpikes, built about the same time as Kentucky's parkways.

Occasionally it is mooted that some of the Interstate highways, for example, those in the sparsely-populated states just east of the Rocky Mountains, should have been turnpikes. The reason is to have those cross-country trucking firms that use them pay for them. But there is no movement to do this.

Interstate Highway System

By 1956, most limited access highways in the eastern United States were toll roads. In that year, the federal Interstate highway program was established, funding non-toll roads with 90% federal dollars and 10% state match, giving little incentive for states to expand their turnpike systems. Funding rules initially restricted collections of tolls on newly funded roadways, bridges, and tunnels. In some situations, expansion or rebuilding of a toll facility using Interstate Highway Program funding resulted in the removal of existing tolls. This occurred in Virginia on Interstate 64 at the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel when a second parallel roadway to the regional 1958 bridge-tunnel was completed in 1976.

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A toll booth being removed from the Overseas Highway in Florida (1954); the use of the term freeway is nonstandard </div A toll booth being removed from the Overseas Highway in Florida (1954); the use of the term freeway is nonstandard

Since the completion of the initial portion of the interstate highway system, regulations were changed, and portions of toll facilities have been added to the system. Some states are again looking at toll financing for new roads and maintenance, to supplement limited federal funding. In some areas, new road projects have been completed with public-private partnerships funded by tolls, such as the Pocahontas Parkway near Richmond, Virginia, which features a costly high level bridge over the shipping channel of the James River and connects Interstate 95 with Interstate 295 (Virginia) to the south of the city.

Toll avoidance: shunpiking

A practice known as shunpiking evolved which entails finding another route for the specific purpose of avoiding payment of tolls.

In some situations where the tolls were increased or felt to be unreasonably high, informal shunpiking by individuals escalated into a form of boycott by regular users, with the goal of applying the financial stress of lost toll revenue to the authority determining the levy.

One such example of shunpiking as a form of boycott occurred at the James River Bridge in eastern Virginia. After years of lower than anticipated revenues on the narrow privately-funded structure built in 1928, the Commonwealth of Virginia finally purchased the facility in 1949. However, rather than announcing a long-expected decrease in tolls, the state officials increased the rates in 1955 without visibly improving the roadway, with the notable exception of building a new toll plaza.

The increased toll rates incensed the public and business users alike. In a well-publicized example of shunpiking, Joseph W. Luter Jr., head of Smithfield Packing Company, the producer of world-famous Smithfield Hams, ordered his truck drivers to take a different route and cross a smaller and cheaper bridge. Despite the boycott by Luter and others, tolls continued for 20 more years. They were finally removed from the old bridge in 1975 when construction began on a toll-free replacement structure.

Shunpiking has increased in Oklahoma since the construction of the center-of-turnpike rest areas. In theory, one could drive, for example, 40 miles on the Turner Turnpike, stop at the rest area, and turn around, avoiding several dollars in tolls. Although tolls are not that unreasonable, one driving Interstate 44 across the entire state can expect to pay $10-$13 in tolls, giving incentive to get around the fees.

Additionally, federal highway regulations require a "free" road to be continuous from one end of a toll road to the other, with the same designation given for its entire length. For example: the turnpikes in Oklahoma are paralleled by Oklahoma State Highway 66 the entire length (it could not be Oklahoma 66, then Oklahoma 8, US 60, etc). These roads, however, do not have to have the same mileage, and may run through towns and zig-zag whereas the turnpike is obviously much shorter.

Toll Roads in the People's Republic of China

A
</div A toll gate on the Beijing Airport Expressway.

Nearly all Chinese expressways and express routes charge tolls, although they are not often networked from one toll expressway to another. However, beginning with the Jingshen Expressway, tolls are gradually being networked. Given the size of the nation, however, the task is rather difficult.

China National Highways, which are not expressways, but "grade-A" routes, also charges tolls. Some provincial, autonomous-regional and municipal routes, as well as some major bridges, will also charge passage fees. In November 2004, legislation in China provided for a minimum length of a stretch of road or expressway in order for tolls to be charged.

Toll Roads in Australia

In Australia, a small majority of freeways have been tolled due to the expense of the freeway being built. Tollways/toll roads can be found in the Australian cities of Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne Ways of collecting the tolls include the traditional toll booth found in Queensland and New South Wales. The toll there is usually $2.00 or more - if you travel on the Logan or Gateway motorways. In Melbourne, the toll is electronically collected by a plastic receiver called an e~tag which is attached to the windscreen. The tollway is an almost world first of its kind. The tollway system is called CityLink and made up of the Tullamarine and Monash freeways and two tunnels linking east with west. In Melbourne's suburbs the toll itself costs up to $10-15 dollars to travel by daypass, or significantly less with an e-tag account and is sometimes avoided.

Toll Roads in Canada

Most tolled roadways in Canada are bridges to the United States. Toll highways disappeared, for the most part, in the 1970s and 1980s. Highway 407 in the Greater Toronto Area is a modern toll route.

Toll Roads in France

In Europe the most substantial use of toll roads is in France, where most of the Autoroutes carry quite heavy tolls: at least some traffic seems to be displaced onto local roads as a result. In a number of countries the companies have often fallen in and out of the public sector, and many have had financial problems.

Toll Roads in Singapore

Singapore introduced a road toll as a means to discourage car traffic into the congested city in the early 1980s.

Toll Roads in Malaysia

Malaysia has extensive toll roads that forms the majority of country's expressways. Most of the toll roads are in major cities and conurbations such as Klang Valley, Johor Bahru and Penang. All of Malaysian toll roads are managed in the BOT (build, operate, transfer) basis as in Hong Kong (see below). Please see Malaysian expressway system for more information.

Toll Roads in Norway

Norwegian authorities closely monitored Singapore's use of tolls as a means to discourage urban traffic and Oslo got its first toll zone outside the ring road in 1987. Any driver wishing to enter central Oslo by car had to pay the fee. Revenue was mainly invested in infrastructure. The lack of general protest and high income from such toll zones made them very popular initially and today toll rings circumscribe Trondheim, Bergen, Stavanger and Kristiansand. The success is only partial: the toll rings have become unpopular and regarded as an extra random tax, new infrastructure has not been developed as expected, and confidence in the road authorities has been dented.

There are also several toll roads to finance road infrastructure and highways in other parts of Norway. Examples of successfull use is the bridge over lake Mjøsa which is now free of charge.

Toll Roads in Hong Kong

In Hong Kong, most tunnels and some bridges that form part of the motorway networks are tolled to cover construction and maintenance costs. Some built recently are managed in the BOT (build, operate, transfer) basis. The companies built the tunnels or bridges are given franchise of a certain length of time (usually 30 years) to operate. Ownership will be transferred to the government when the franchise expires.

Toll Roads in Indonesia

Indonesia opened its first toll road in 1978 when the Jagorawi Toll Road linking the capital city of Jakarta to Bogor and Ciawi, about 60 km south, completed. Still limited in existence, it has just completed a 50 km mountainuous toll from Cikampek to the highland city of Bandung in West Java and is named Cipularang Toll Road. This latest toll also connects to the existing Cikampek Toll Road that runs from Jakarta.

Toll Roads in Italy

In Italy all the autostrade (the Italian for Autobahn, or Highways) are toll roads. They are all networked in the fact that if you enter in Naples and exit in Venice you will pay only at the exit, even though you have changed several streets. They are named AXX, where XX is a number from 1 to 30, e.g. A1 connects Milan to Naples; and they might have nicknames ("Autostrada del Sole" = "Sun Highway" for the A1). The numbers don't follow a methodology. 61% of the Autostrade are handled by the "Autostrade per l'Italia S.p.A" society, and its subsidiaries. The network of highways covers most of Italy: North and Center Italy are well covered, South and Sicily are scarcely covered, Sardinia is not covered.

Other toll roads in Italy are the urban areas of Venice and Florence where tourist buses must pay a fee to enter the city. Autostrade are pretty expensive too. For example the typical Milan-Naples route of around 700 Km costs approximately 40 €.

Toll Roads in Portugal

In Portugal a certain number of roads are designated Toll-Roads. They charge a fixed value per kilometre distance, with several classes depending on vehicle type and regulated by the government. Several authorised franchises run them, the largest at present being BRISA. For cash-free payments there exists the Via Verde system (Portuguese for Green Way) which is an electronic tag that is fitted to vehicles and automatically debits an associated bank-account with the cost of the journey made.

Well-known roads are the A1, which goes from Lisbon to Oporto and the A2, from Almada to the Spanish border, close to Badajoz.

Stickers in Europe

Austria (for vehicles to 3.5 tons), the Czech Republic, Switzerland and Hungary have toll motorways (some, though, are toll-free). Payment in this countries are done in the form of "vignettes", or stickers being affixed to the car's front window, which are valid for a certain amount of time. The time is always one calendar year in Switzerland; in Austria cheaper vignettes with shorter validity are also available.

Toll Collection for trucks in Europe

  • Switzerland introduced a toll-system for trucks over 3.5 tons in January 2001, and
  • Austria introduced a electronic toll collection system for trucks over 3.5 tons in January 2004, based on DSRC micro wave technology.
  • Germany followed suit with some delay through technical problems on January 1, 2005. The German Toll Collect system is based on a technology using satellites; truck operators may choose to either install on-board units for automated tracking of movements, or to book their route in advance using the internet or computerized booking terminals.

Toll collection technology

The term turnpike refers to the pike or long stick that was held across the road, and only raised when the traveler paid the toll.

Travelers have disliked toll roads not only for the cost of the toll, but also for the delays at toll booths.

An adaptation of aircraft "identification friend or foe" technology, called electronic toll collection, is lessening the delay incurred in toll collection, and raises hope of eliminating it entirely in the future. The electronic system determines whether the cars passing are enrolled in the program, alerts enforcers for those that are not, and debits electronically the accounts of registered cars without their stopping, or even opening a window. Currently, DSRC is used as a wireless protocol. Other systems are based on GPRS/GSM and GPS technology. However the introduction of such a system (for trucks only) in Germany has been riddled with numerous problems of technical, administrative and political nature, leading to widespread ridicule in the media.

Highway 407 in the province of Ontario, Canada is one of the most technologically sophisticated toll highways in this respect. It has absolutely no toll booths. Instead, the rear license plates of all vehicles are photographed when they enter and exit the highway. A bill is mailed monthly for usage of the 407. Lower charges are levied on frequent 407 users who carry electronic transponders in their vehicles. Another road which uses the same technology is Israel's first toll road, Highway 6, also known as the Cross-Israel Highway, which will eventually stretch almost the entire north-south length of Israel. Raytheon created the infrastructure of these two highways, as well as the Amerigo Vespucio Sur Toll road in Santiago, Chile, the High-Occupancy Toll (HOT) lanes of Interstate 394 in Minnesota, USA, and the Marechal Rondon Highway in the state of Sao Paulo, Brazil (Source: Raytheon).

In Illinois, coins and I-Pass are used in every toll plaza instead of toll tickets. On the east coast, similar systems include E-ZPass, Smart Tag, or SunPass. The systems use a small radio transponder mounted in or on a customer's vehicle to deduct toll fares from a pre-paid account as the vehicle passes through the toll barrier, reducing manpower at toll booths and increasing traffic flow and fuel efficiency by reducing the need for complete stops to pay tolls at these locations. Some jurisdictions will fine a user for speeding if they pass through two tollgates in such time that they must have been going over the legal limit to do so.

By designing a tollgate specifically for electronic collection, it is possible to carry out open-road tolling, where the customer does not need to slow at all when passing through the tollgate. Another feature of many electronic toll collection systems is interagency interoperability, where the same transponder is accepted at many toll agencies. For instance, the E-ZPass tag is accepted at most toll facilities from Virginia to Maine.

A similiar system opened in Houston, Texas recently called the Westpark Tollway. The Westpark Tollway runs from the Uptown Houston District and the city's inner loop freeway, Loop 610, west to the Sam Houston Tollway(Beltway 8) and on to the western suburban area known as Alief(a former town annexed by the city). Its right of way was obtained by removing an abandoned railroad track which had been unused for at least a decade. With relatively lighter congestion than its free alternatives Interstate 10 and the Southwest Freeway(US 59) and an interesting view of the city's skyline not possible anywhere else it can be fun to drive. In the future, it will be expanded to the west.

Electronic toll collection (ETC) systems also have drawbacks. A computer glitch can result in delays several miles long. Some state turnpike commissions such as the Ohio Turnpike have debated implementing E-ZPass but have found that such as system would be ineffective because most of the people who use the turnpike are not commuters, are from states that have no ETS on turnpikes, or are from states that don't have a turnpike at all. Also, the toll plazas of some turnpikes are antiquated because they were originally meant for traffic that stops to pay the toll or get a ticket.

The technology does have its limits. For instance, the Highway 407 automatic number plate recognition technology has a reputation for the occasional misread plate, leading to bills being sent to motorists in remote parts of Ontario who have never been near the tollway.

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