For most of the expressway, the Batong line of Beijing Subway, an extension of Line 1, sits near the centre of the expressway, linking central Beijing to Tuqiao on the Eastern 6th Ring Road, beyond central Tongzhou.[2]
The Jingtong expressway was the first highway project built under Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) scheme in China. The project was awarded to Lin Tung-Yen China with a 20-year concession period (1996–2016). The expressway was opened to the public in 1996.[4]
In December 2004, a plan was unveiled to local media to interlink the 2.5 km of non-expressway between the Jingtong and Jingha expressways with an express road connection, eliminating traffic bottlenecks between Ximazhuang and Beiguan Roundabout. This link finally opened in December 2006, with the remaining bits and pieces of additional roadworks finishing in early 2007.[5]
^北京志: 市政卷. 道桥志. 排水志 [Chronicles of Beijing: Municipal Administration Volume. Chronicles of Roads and Bridges. Chronicles of Drainage] (in Simplified Chinese). Beijing Publishing House. 2002. p. 484. ISBN978-7-200-04455-3.
^"北京地铁终极规划图 这样就不会堵车了" [The ultimate plan of Beijing subway will avoid traffic jams]. Sohu Business (in Simplified Chinese). 28 September 2011. Retrieved 23 December 2023.
^"体育场馆" [Gymnasium]. Communication University of China (in Simplified Chinese). Retrieved 23 December 2023.
^改革纵橫 [Reform Aspect] (in Simplified Chinese). 1996. p. 18.
^"京通快速路与京哈高速路联络线成形 年底将通车" [The connection line between Jingtong Expressway and Beijing-Harbin Expressway has taken shape and will be open to traffic by the end of the year]. Sohu News (in Simplified Chinese). 14 October 2006. Retrieved 23 December 2023.