Drivers from other parts of the country will no longer have to worry
about
getting lost traveling in Beijing with the help of
an itinerary map.
Beijing Times reports a mechanism aimed at easing
traveling
inconveniences for outsiders of Beijing will start in March at all
16
checkpoints entering the city. As long as the drivers tell the
police
their destination, the police will print out a free itinerary map
that
leads the way from the checkpoint to their destination.
On the
map, drivers can find driving routes, distance, urban
traffic
network information, as well as the number and type of their
automobiles.
An official with the Beijing Traffic Management Bureau, Jiang
Jinhui,
says the itinerary on the map is the shortest and the most
efficient.
The service is based on a route-seeking system that compiles
routes
according to different automobile types and the traffic situation.
The
official warns that drivers must tell the police their automobile type
in
case some types of automobiles are banned in some areas because
of
traffic control.
A recent survey shows that more than half of
drivers from outside of
Beijing are not familiar with the routes in Beijing
and eight out of ten
want the free itinerary guidance service.



