You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Hebrew. Click [show] for important translation instructions.
Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Hebrew Wikipedia article at [[:he:כביש 16]]; see its history for attribution.
You may also add the template {{Translated|he|כביש 16}} to the talk page.
Highway 16 (or Ariel Sharon Blvd[1]) is a highway at the western entrance to Jerusalem providing direct access to the southern and central sections of the city from the west. Most of the road is located inside newly built tunnels. The project cost approximately 1.5 billion shekels,[2][3][4][5][6] and was inaugurated a year ahead of schedule on August 31, 2022.[7]
Highway
The highway connects Highway 1 at the new Motza Interchange and Jerusalem's Highway 50 (Begin Boulevard) at Givat Mordechai Interchange. The road mostly travels through a series of tunnels under the west Jerusalem neighbourhoods of Har Nof and Yefeh Nof and the parking lots of Shaare Zedek Medical Center. In the center, an above-ground interchange was built in the valley of Nahal Revida (Revida Stream) adjacent to the Pi Glilot Fuel Terminal to connect to Derech Yosef Weitz leading to Givat Shaul. The road was constructed as a four-lane freeway with a speed limit of 80 km/h.
History
The road was first proposed in the 1990s. Initially, the road was supposed to skirt around the western and southern slopes of Har Nof before entering a tunnel at Nahal Revida, continuing eastward under Yefeh Nof. This would have created nearly a kilometre of fully open road through the Jerusalem Forest. This plan was met with stiff opposition by the Jewish National Fund and a variety of "Green" groups due to ecological damage to the forest. As a result, the plan was changed to include a tunnel under Har Nof with an intermediate above-ground interchange at Nahal Revida.[8]
The program was stopped in 2003 to conduct environmental studies and consider an alternative to the Nahal Revida Interchange. By the end of 2007, the National Infrastructure Committee adopted the plan pending clarifications and public review. The plan moved forward again with an indemnity agreement between the Jerusalem Municipality and the Israel Ministry of Transport in 2010. At the same time, responsibility for building the road was shifted from the Moriah Jerusalem Development Corporation to the National Roads Company of Israel. Economic and environmental studies were updated. A plan to build the road as one long tunnel with the Nahal Ravida Interchange underground was rejected for economic reasons and because of the need for massive ventilation facilities that would cause greater environmental damage to the forest.[8]
The plan was approved in 2011, again with further delays pending public review.[9] According to the National Roads Company, the plan was approved and budgeted at the end of 2012. After many delays, the construction contract was finally awarded in August 2018, with construction expected to begin in 2019 and last through 2023.[6]
Following the death of Talmudic scholar and former SephardiChief Rabbi of IsraelOvadia Yosef in 2013, Israeli Minister of Transport Yisrael Katz announced that the road would be named in his honour.[10] However, the Jerusalem Municipality Names Committee, which has jurisdiction in the matter, declared in 2017 that the road would be named in honour of former Israeli Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon.[11]
Construction Accident
On June 7, 2021, a portion of the Shaare Zedek hospital's external parking lot collapsed.[12] Seven parked cars fell into the sinkhole, which was deep enough to "swallow" a whole palm tree vertically, as well.[13][14] There were no reported victims, either killed or wounded. A cave or space between the ground and the excavated tunnel seems to be the sinkhole's cause.[15] Later, in August, Netivei Israel's spokesman said "We are exercising responsibility by repairing the hole," adding "responsibility is not guilt" because "there is also a separate issue regarding water from the Gihon water company that had permeated the ground due to insufficient drainage. It is also possible that we will never know the cause.".[16]
Criticism
Critics of the project note that because the road currently ends at a traffic light, it creates heavy congestion inside the city. To partially overcome this, a set of tunnels that will enable a more direct connection to Begin highway are expected to be completed in the late-2020s. Other criticisms include the project's immense budget, which could have instead been used to advance public transportation. Building of the project significantly disrupted the Motza and Revida valleys' natural habitat, including a large pre-historic archeological site, which was discovered and subsequently reburied.[17]
^Liran Tamari (2022-08-31). "פרסום ראשון: המשטרה מתנגדת לפתיחת כביש 16" [First publication: Police oppose the opening of Route 16]. mynetjerusalem (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2022-08-31.