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Parramatta Road

Parramatta Road is the major historical east-west artery of metropolitan Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, connecting the Sydney CBD with Parramatta. It is the easternmost part of the Great Western Highway. Since the 1990s its role has been augmented by the City West Link and M4 Motorway.

Parramatta Road

General information
TypeRoad
Length23 km (14 mi)
Opened1811
Route number(s)
Former
route number
see Former route allocations
Major junctions
East end Broadway
Chippendale, Sydney
 
West end Church Street
Granville, Sydney
Location(s)
Major suburbsUltimo, Chippendale, Glebe, Camperdown, Forest Lodge, Annandale, Stanmore, Leichhardt. Petersham, Lewisham, Haberfield, Summer Hill Ashfield. Five Dock, Croydon, Concord, Burwood, Strathfield, Homebush, Auburn

The road begins in the east as a continuation of George Street, which becomes Broadway west of Harris Street, and Parramatta Road west of the City Road junction, and ends at the junction with Church Street in Parramatta. Its 23 kilometres (14 mi) distance is dominated by caryards and small marginally-viable shops. At the same time, however, it has over 100 abandoned and derelict stores.[1][2] Owing to this and its abrasively noisy traffic, it has rarely been considered beautiful.[3]

Opened in 1811, it is one of Sydney's oldest roads and Australia's first road between two cities (before Sydney and Parramatta coalesced). As at 2015, over three million commuters every year drove Parramatta Road.[4] The road is the hub of Sydney's motor dealership industry - with 67% of the adjacent land used for motor retailing and services.

History edit

1790s–1800s: Development edit

 
A carriage marked "Ashfield-Burwood" trundles down Parramatta Road in the early 1870s, with the University of Sydney in the background.

British settlement in Parramatta began in the same year (1788) as it did in Sydney. The Parramatta River was used as navigation between them. Sometime between 1789 and 1791 an overland track was made to provide an official land route between the two settlements.[5]

Parramatta Road dates to the 1792 formation of a route linking Sydney to the settlement of Parramatta. This route was formalised under the direction of Surveyor–General Augustus Alt in 1797. Parramatta Road became one of the colony's most important early roads, and for many years remained one of Sydney's principal thoroughfares.[6] The early road was a poorly built and poorly maintained track through bush. In 1794, the governor of the colony reported that he had caused a very good road to be made, but there is no evidence that any bridges were built over the streams. The road subsequently deteriorated and on 9 June 1805 the Sydney Gazette reported that the road was impassable as the result of heavy rain. Attempts to improve the road continued over the years.[7]

1810–1815 edit

By 1811, Parramatta Road had officially opened to traffic and was financed during a large portion of the 19th century by a toll, with toll booths located at what now is Sydney University and the Duck River. Governor Macquarie called tenders for the repair of the road, raised a three shilling per gallon levy on spirits and levied a toll to pay for the work. The road was to be 10 metres wide. This turnpike road was opened on 10 April 1811. The toll barriers were at the present Railway Square and at Becket's Creek (near Parramatta).[citation needed]

In 1814, a stage cart service was established along Parramatta Road. Fares were 10 shillings for passengers and 3 pence for letters. Heavy rain again nearly destroyed this road, so in 1817 it was announced that all tree-stumps would be removed and the road paved with stone which would be covered with earth and gravel. This improvement was announced as finished on 15 January 1815.[citation needed]

In 1815 the "profit" from the Sydney toll reached £465. The growth of Sydney caused the toll barrier to be moved to Grose Farm (present University of Sydney) in April 1836. In 1839 it was moved further west to Annandale.[citation needed]

1820s–1880s edit

 
Parramatta Road in the 1930s looking east across Iron Cove Creek towards Lewisham

The colony's first stage coach (valued at £300) was imported in 1821 but did not begin regular service until 1823. The stage left the city at 7:00 am, arrived in Parramatta at 9:30 am and left Parramatta for the return journey at 4:00 pm. Inside passengers were charged six shillings. Hazards on the road included the threat of attacks by Indigenous people and bushrangers. Hotels and settlements sprang up along the road to serve coaching traffic.[8]

The importance of the road declined with the advent of the Sydney-Parramatta railway in 1855. In 1883, a steam tram line opened along Parramatta Road as far as Annandale, and was extended onward to Norton Street in 1884, where it turned to run along Norton Street to Short Street.

In the 1800s, the government acquired a strip of land from Ashfield to Burwood from the Rosebank Estate, owned by the Sisters of the Good Samaritan, Australia's first religious congregation. Rosebank College now stands on the former Rosebank Estate, and the heritage-listed building of the private school stands adjacent to the road at Five Dock.

1900s–present: Motorisation edit

Sydney Municipal Council began widening the major routes into the city centre in 1911, including the construction of Broadway and the widening of the cutting on Parramatta Road adjacent to Sydney University. In the 1920s, the road was sealed and tramlines were removed from the road. Sheep and cattle were still crossing Parramatta Road at Homebush as late as the 1960s.

Increased traffic congestion along the road steadily made it less attractive for residential and commercial use during the 20th century. By the last quarter of the 20th century, the only active businesses on many stretches of the road were car dealerships. The decline of industry in the Inner West also drove the decline of commercial areas formerly catering to factory workers. By the end of the 20th century, proposals to revitalise Parramatta Road and make it more attractive were regularly made.

One of these proposals was made in 2012, which would have widened and lowered the road below street level in a "slot" as part of the Roads & Maritime Services WestConnex motorway proposal. This plan was abandoned, and the WestConnex proposal was later changed to a pair of tunnels parallel to Parramatta Road and connecting to the existing M4 motorway. The new extension was known as M4 East and was eventually built between the end of the existing M4 motorway in North Strathfield and Haberfield, where it connected to the A4 road. The new tunnels opened to traffic in July 2019.[9][10] The project resulted in the creation of a new entry and exit ramp on Parramatta Road in Ashfield, the narrowing of westbound traffic lanes for through-traffic to one lane at either end of the tunnel, and the demolition of a large number of houses in Ashfield and Haberfield to make way for the tunnel ramps.

Criticism edit

 
Homebush Cinema, built in 1925, is one of the many derelict establishments on the road, which operated until 1996 as a reception centre.

The road has been criticised by the community for its traffic pollution, congestion, and for its vacant shops and rundown buildings, particularly between Leichhardt and Concord, and local government has been accused of failing to adopt policies to encourage the redevelopment and regeneration of vacant sites.[11]

A local mayor described it as a "varicose vein".[12] A NSW Business Chamber Executive Patricia Forsythe said that the road is "one of the least attractive commercial areas of Sydney". Former NSW premier Nick Greiner thought the road looked "like Beirut on a bad day". The Sydney Morning Herald writer Elizabeth Farrelly described it as "filthy, noisy, sclerotic and dull".[13] On a lighter note, Tess De Quincey, an Australian performer/director said, "Every chapter of Sydney's history has been written on Parramatta Road."[14] A Sydney Morning Herald editor said that whilst the road is "ugly in parts, drab in others, and generally unpleasant", it is still "fundamental to the economic and social viability of the greater city".[15]

Since the 1970s many buildings fronting Parramatta Road, especially those in the prime locations of the Inner West (from Newtown to Homebush), have become vacant and fallen into disrepair, with many vandalised. Previously these buildings were a major part of local life for the suburbs along Parramatta Road, providing employment, retailing and other services. The buildings with graffiti and broken windows provide a sight that is sought out by graffiti vandals and proficient urban photographers.[16]

Nicholas Munning, an owner of a music store in Annandale, described the road as, "A lost cause...You can see the hodgepodge of buildings - abandoned buildings, abandoned shops - [with people thinking] let’s just let this sit here for four years until we get council approval to knock it down and build apartments...They don’t care if it sits there vacant with broken windows and looks like shit, The problem is the whole road looks like that. So nobody is going to say, 'hey, this is a great area. I’m going to spend $x making a really classy looking shop or restaurant'.”[17]

Redevelopment plan edit

The Government of New South Wales published the 'Parramatta Road Urban Transformation Strategy' in 2016, with a 30-year plan for redeveloping the area through planning and infrastructure investment.[18] Among the strategy's goals are housing an additional 56,000 people in 27,000 new homes on the corridor (with minimum five percent affordable housing); 50,000 workers employed in the area; and 66 hectares of new open space is provided through linear parks and along watercourses or infrastructure.[19]

The proposed development rights are worth millions of dollars to developers but are also controversial due to the density of some of the proposals and the likely impact on an already over-congested road. As a result, many of the development proposals are controversial with local residents and are opposed by local councils. A number of the disputes between developers and councils have led to court disputes.[17]

The Inner West Council and City of Canada Bay, through which the road runs for much of its length, have proposed using an electric guided bus running on the centre of the road for public transport, as opposed to kerbside buses as suggested in the strategy.[20]

Location edit

 
Parramatta Road looking west at Burwood, near Rosebank College, during peak hour

The highway forms the boundaries of various suburbs along the way and ends at the junction of Church Street, Parramatta, where the Great Western Highway briefly turns to the north. Parramatta Road forms the southern boundary of the following suburbs:

Parramatta Road forms the northern boundary of the following suburbs:

West of Concord and Burwood, Parramatta Road passes through Strathfield, Homebush, Auburn and Granville before reaching Parramatta.

Former route numbers edit

Parramatta Road has many former route allocations including former National Route 32.[21][22][23][24] Where and when the former route numbers were implemented are stated below.

ChippendaleSummer Hill:

  •   National Route 32 (1954–1992)
  •   Metroad 4 (1992–2000)
  •   Metroad 5 (1992–2001)
  •   State Route 31 (2001–2013)
  •   A22 (2013–present)

Summer HillHaberfield:

  •   National Route 32 (1954–1992)
  •   Metroad 4 (1992–2000)
  • unallocated: (2000–present)

HaberfieldNorth Strathfield:

  •   National Route 32 (1954–1992)
  •   Metroad 4 (1992–2013)
  •   A4 (2013–2019)
  •   A44 (2019–present)

North StrathfieldAuburn:

  •   National Route 32 (1954–1982)
  •   State Route 44 (1982–2013)
  •   A44 (2013–present)

AuburnClyde:

  •   National Route 32 (1954–1984)
  •   State Route 44 (1982–2013)
  •   A44 (2013–present)

ClydeGranville:

  •   National Route 32 (1954–1986)
  •   State Route 44 (1982–2013)
  •   A44 (2013–present)

References edit

  1. ^ "City's main artery a desolate wasteland". The Daily Telegraph. 18 April 2011. Retrieved 14 January 2015.
  2. ^ . Time Out Sydney, Nicholas Adams. 16 October 2012. Archived from the original on 15 January 2015. Retrieved 14 January 2015.
  3. ^ "Renew project targets Forum". Alt Media, Mason McCann. 26 September 2013. Retrieved 14 January 2015.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 January 2015.
  5. ^ Broomham, Rosemary (2001), Vital connections: a history of NSW roads from 1788, Hale & Iremonger in association with the Roads & Traffic Authority, p. 25, ISBN 978-0-86806-703-2
  6. ^ "Sandstone Kerb - Parramatta Road". State Heritage Register. Office of Environment & Heritage, Government of New South Wales. 2005. Retrieved 7 October 2013.
  7. ^ Francis Peron, 'Account of Port Jackson and Sydney Town, New South Wales', translation quoted in The literary panorama, vol 10, Charles Taylor, London, 1809, col 921
  8. ^ The Roadmakers: A History of Main Roads in New South Wales, Department of Main Roads, Sydney, 1976, p 47
  9. ^ "WestConnex". NSW Government. from the original on 10 July 2019. Retrieved 10 July 2019.
  10. ^ "New M4 tunnels to open this weekend". WestConnex. 10 July 2019. Retrieved 10 July 2019.
  11. ^ "CAN PARRAMATTA RD ROCK ONCE MORE?". Ciao Magazine. 12 July 2013. Retrieved 14 January 2015.
  12. ^ "200-year dream for renewal and free flow for 'varicose vein'". Sydney Morning Herald. 5 October 2012. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  13. ^ "Developers won't save Parramatta Road alone". Sydney Morning Herald. 21 June 2012. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  14. ^ "isbn:9052010366 – Google Search".
  15. ^ "A chance to get Parramatta Road right". Sydney Morning Herald. 31 October 2014. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  16. ^ Why derelict buildings worth millions are being left behind in a region desperate for places to live by David Barwell (The Daily Telegraph)
  17. ^ a b 'The shops have closed': Parramatta Road 'a lost cause', retailer says by Garry Maddox (Sydney Morning Herald)
  18. ^ "Parramatta Road Urban Transformation Strategy 2016". Landcom. 19 February 2020. Retrieved 11 March 2021.
  19. ^ "Parramatta Road Corridor Urban Transformation Strategy" (PDF).
  20. ^ "Parramatta Road Urban Renewal - Inner West Council". www.innerwest.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 11 March 2021.
  21. ^ "National Route 32". OZROADS: The Australian Roads Website. 2013. Retrieved 1 June 2013.[self-published source]
  22. ^ "National Routes". OZROADS: The Australian Roads Website. 2013. Retrieved 1 June 2013.[self-published source]
  23. ^ "Metroad 4". OZROADS: The Australian Roads Website. 2013. Retrieved 1 June 2013.[self-published source]
  24. ^ "Metroad 5". OZROADS: The Australian Roads Website. 2013. Retrieved 1 June 2013.[self-published source]

External links edit

33°52′05″S 151°05′57″E / 33.86814°S 151.09909°E / -33.86814; 151.09909

parramatta, road, major, historical, east, west, artery, metropolitan, sydney, south, wales, australia, connecting, sydney, with, parramatta, easternmost, part, great, western, highway, since, 1990s, role, been, augmented, city, west, link, motorway, south, wa. Parramatta Road is the major historical east west artery of metropolitan Sydney New South Wales Australia connecting the Sydney CBD with Parramatta It is the easternmost part of the Great Western Highway Since the 1990s its role has been augmented by the City West Link and M4 Motorway Parramatta RoadNew South WalesGeneral informationTypeRoadLength23 km 14 mi Opened1811Route number s A22 2013 present Chippendale Summer Hill A44 2013 present Haberfield Granville Formerroute numbersee Former route allocationsMajor junctionsEast endBroadwayChippendale Sydney Liverpool Road Wattle Street M4 East Marlborough Road Silverwater Road Woodville RoadWest endChurch StreetGranville SydneyLocation s Major suburbsUltimo Chippendale Glebe Camperdown Forest Lodge Annandale Stanmore Leichhardt Petersham Lewisham Haberfield Summer Hill Ashfield Five Dock Croydon Concord Burwood Strathfield Homebush Auburn The road begins in the east as a continuation of George Street which becomes Broadway west of Harris Street and Parramatta Road west of the City Road junction and ends at the junction with Church Street in Parramatta Its 23 kilometres 14 mi distance is dominated by caryards and small marginally viable shops At the same time however it has over 100 abandoned and derelict stores 1 2 Owing to this and its abrasively noisy traffic it has rarely been considered beautiful 3 Opened in 1811 it is one of Sydney s oldest roads and Australia s first road between two cities before Sydney and Parramatta coalesced As at 2015 over three million commuters every year drove Parramatta Road 4 The road is the hub of Sydney s motor dealership industry with 67 of the adjacent land used for motor retailing and services Contents 1 History 1 1 1790s 1800s Development 1 2 1810 1815 1 3 1820s 1880s 1 4 1900s present Motorisation 2 Criticism 3 Redevelopment plan 4 Location 5 Former route numbers 6 References 7 External linksHistory edit1790s 1800s Development edit nbsp A carriage marked Ashfield Burwood trundles down Parramatta Road in the early 1870s with the University of Sydney in the background British settlement in Parramatta began in the same year 1788 as it did in Sydney The Parramatta River was used as navigation between them Sometime between 1789 and 1791 an overland track was made to provide an official land route between the two settlements 5 Parramatta Road dates to the 1792 formation of a route linking Sydney to the settlement of Parramatta This route was formalised under the direction of Surveyor General Augustus Alt in 1797 Parramatta Road became one of the colony s most important early roads and for many years remained one of Sydney s principal thoroughfares 6 The early road was a poorly built and poorly maintained track through bush In 1794 the governor of the colony reported that he had caused a very good road to be made but there is no evidence that any bridges were built over the streams The road subsequently deteriorated and on 9 June 1805 the Sydney Gazette reported that the road was impassable as the result of heavy rain Attempts to improve the road continued over the years 7 1810 1815 edit By 1811 Parramatta Road had officially opened to traffic and was financed during a large portion of the 19th century by a toll with toll booths located at what now is Sydney University and the Duck River Governor Macquarie called tenders for the repair of the road raised a three shilling per gallon levy on spirits and levied a toll to pay for the work The road was to be 10 metres wide This turnpike road was opened on 10 April 1811 The toll barriers were at the present Railway Square and at Becket s Creek near Parramatta citation needed In 1814 a stage cart service was established along Parramatta Road Fares were 10 shillings for passengers and 3 pence for letters Heavy rain again nearly destroyed this road so in 1817 it was announced that all tree stumps would be removed and the road paved with stone which would be covered with earth and gravel This improvement was announced as finished on 15 January 1815 citation needed In 1815 the profit from the Sydney toll reached 465 The growth of Sydney caused the toll barrier to be moved to Grose Farm present University of Sydney in April 1836 In 1839 it was moved further west to Annandale citation needed 1820s 1880s edit nbsp Parramatta Road in the 1930s looking east across Iron Cove Creek towards Lewisham The colony s first stage coach valued at 300 was imported in 1821 but did not begin regular service until 1823 The stage left the city at 7 00 am arrived in Parramatta at 9 30 am and left Parramatta for the return journey at 4 00 pm Inside passengers were charged six shillings Hazards on the road included the threat of attacks by Indigenous people and bushrangers Hotels and settlements sprang up along the road to serve coaching traffic 8 The importance of the road declined with the advent of the Sydney Parramatta railway in 1855 In 1883 a steam tram line opened along Parramatta Road as far as Annandale and was extended onward to Norton Street in 1884 where it turned to run along Norton Street to Short Street In the 1800s the government acquired a strip of land from Ashfield to Burwood from the Rosebank Estate owned by the Sisters of the Good Samaritan Australia s first religious congregation Rosebank College now stands on the former Rosebank Estate and the heritage listed building of the private school stands adjacent to the road at Five Dock 1900s present Motorisation edit Sydney Municipal Council began widening the major routes into the city centre in 1911 including the construction of Broadway and the widening of the cutting on Parramatta Road adjacent to Sydney University In the 1920s the road was sealed and tramlines were removed from the road Sheep and cattle were still crossing Parramatta Road at Homebush as late as the 1960s Increased traffic congestion along the road steadily made it less attractive for residential and commercial use during the 20th century By the last quarter of the 20th century the only active businesses on many stretches of the road were car dealerships The decline of industry in the Inner West also drove the decline of commercial areas formerly catering to factory workers By the end of the 20th century proposals to revitalise Parramatta Road and make it more attractive were regularly made One of these proposals was made in 2012 which would have widened and lowered the road below street level in a slot as part of the Roads amp Maritime Services WestConnex motorway proposal This plan was abandoned and the WestConnex proposal was later changed to a pair of tunnels parallel to Parramatta Road and connecting to the existing M4 motorway The new extension was known as M4 East and was eventually built between the end of the existing M4 motorway in North Strathfield and Haberfield where it connected to the A4 road The new tunnels opened to traffic in July 2019 9 10 The project resulted in the creation of a new entry and exit ramp on Parramatta Road in Ashfield the narrowing of westbound traffic lanes for through traffic to one lane at either end of the tunnel and the demolition of a large number of houses in Ashfield and Haberfield to make way for the tunnel ramps Criticism edit nbsp Homebush Cinema built in 1925 is one of the many derelict establishments on the road which operated until 1996 as a reception centre The road has been criticised by the community for its traffic pollution congestion and for its vacant shops and rundown buildings particularly between Leichhardt and Concord and local government has been accused of failing to adopt policies to encourage the redevelopment and regeneration of vacant sites 11 A local mayor described it as a varicose vein 12 A NSW Business Chamber Executive Patricia Forsythe said that the road is one of the least attractive commercial areas of Sydney Former NSW premier Nick Greiner thought the road looked like Beirut on a bad day The Sydney Morning Herald writer Elizabeth Farrelly described it as filthy noisy sclerotic and dull 13 On a lighter note Tess De Quincey an Australian performer director said Every chapter of Sydney s history has been written on Parramatta Road 14 A Sydney Morning Herald editor said that whilst the road is ugly in parts drab in others and generally unpleasant it is still fundamental to the economic and social viability of the greater city 15 Since the 1970s many buildings fronting Parramatta Road especially those in the prime locations of the Inner West from Newtown to Homebush have become vacant and fallen into disrepair with many vandalised Previously these buildings were a major part of local life for the suburbs along Parramatta Road providing employment retailing and other services The buildings with graffiti and broken windows provide a sight that is sought out by graffiti vandals and proficient urban photographers 16 Nicholas Munning an owner of a music store in Annandale described the road as A lost cause You can see the hodgepodge of buildings abandoned buildings abandoned shops with people thinking let s just let this sit here for four years until we get council approval to knock it down and build apartments They don t care if it sits there vacant with broken windows and looks like shit The problem is the whole road looks like that So nobody is going to say hey this is a great area I m going to spend x making a really classy looking shop or restaurant 17 Redevelopment plan editThe Government of New South Wales published the Parramatta Road Urban Transformation Strategy in 2016 with a 30 year plan for redeveloping the area through planning and infrastructure investment 18 Among the strategy s goals are housing an additional 56 000 people in 27 000 new homes on the corridor with minimum five percent affordable housing 50 000 workers employed in the area and 66 hectares of new open space is provided through linear parks and along watercourses or infrastructure 19 The proposed development rights are worth millions of dollars to developers but are also controversial due to the density of some of the proposals and the likely impact on an already over congested road As a result many of the development proposals are controversial with local residents and are opposed by local councils A number of the disputes between developers and councils have led to court disputes 17 The Inner West Council and City of Canada Bay through which the road runs for much of its length have proposed using an electric guided bus running on the centre of the road for public transport as opposed to kerbside buses as suggested in the strategy 20 Location edit nbsp Parramatta Road looking west at Burwood near Rosebank College during peak hour The highway forms the boundaries of various suburbs along the way and ends at the junction of Church Street Parramatta where the Great Western Highway briefly turns to the north Parramatta Road forms the southern boundary of the following suburbs Ultimo Glebe Forest Lodge Annandale Leichhardt Haberfield Five Dock Concord Parramatta Road forms the northern boundary of the following suburbs Chippendale Camperdown Stanmore Lewisham Petersham Summer Hill Ashfield Croydon Burwood West of Concord and Burwood Parramatta Road passes through Strathfield Homebush Auburn and Granville before reaching Parramatta Former route numbers editParramatta Road has many former route allocations including former National Route 32 21 22 23 24 Where and when the former route numbers were implemented are stated below Chippendale Summer Hill nbsp National Route 32 1954 1992 nbsp Metroad 4 1992 2000 nbsp Metroad 5 1992 2001 nbsp State Route 31 2001 2013 nbsp A22 2013 present Summer Hill Haberfield nbsp National Route 32 1954 1992 nbsp Metroad 4 1992 2000 unallocated 2000 present Haberfield North Strathfield nbsp National Route 32 1954 1992 nbsp Metroad 4 1992 2013 nbsp A4 2013 2019 nbsp A44 2019 present North Strathfield Auburn nbsp National Route 32 1954 1982 nbsp State Route 44 1982 2013 nbsp A44 2013 present Auburn Clyde nbsp National Route 32 1954 1984 nbsp State Route 44 1982 2013 nbsp A44 2013 present Clyde Granville nbsp National Route 32 1954 1986 nbsp State Route 44 1982 2013 nbsp A44 2013 present References edit City s main artery a desolate wasteland The Daily Telegraph 18 April 2011 Retrieved 14 January 2015 AV Union Time Out Sydney Nicholas Adams 16 October 2012 Archived from the original on 15 January 2015 Retrieved 14 January 2015 Renew project targets Forum Alt Media Mason McCann 26 September 2013 Retrieved 14 January 2015 PARRAMATTA ROAD History Archived from the original on 15 January 2015 Broomham Rosemary 2001 Vital connections a history of NSW roads from 1788 Hale amp Iremonger in association with the Roads amp Traffic Authority p 25 ISBN 978 0 86806 703 2 Sandstone Kerb Parramatta Road State Heritage Register Office of Environment amp Heritage Government of New South Wales 2005 Retrieved 7 October 2013 Francis Peron Account of Port Jackson and Sydney Town New South Wales translation quoted in The literary panorama vol 10 Charles Taylor London 1809 col 921 The Roadmakers A History of Main Roads in New South Wales Department of Main Roads Sydney 1976 p 47 WestConnex NSW Government Archived from the original on 10 July 2019 Retrieved 10 July 2019 New M4 tunnels to open this weekend WestConnex 10 July 2019 Retrieved 10 July 2019 CAN PARRAMATTA RD ROCK ONCE MORE Ciao Magazine 12 July 2013 Retrieved 14 January 2015 200 year dream for renewal and free flow for varicose vein Sydney Morning Herald 5 October 2012 Retrieved 16 January 2015 Developers won t save Parramatta Road alone Sydney Morning Herald 21 June 2012 Retrieved 16 January 2015 isbn 9052010366 Google Search A chance to get Parramatta Road right Sydney Morning Herald 31 October 2014 Retrieved 16 January 2015 Why derelict buildings worth millions are being left behind in a region desperate for places to live by David Barwell The Daily Telegraph a b The shops have closed Parramatta Road a lost cause retailer says by Garry Maddox Sydney Morning Herald Parramatta Road Urban Transformation Strategy 2016 Landcom 19 February 2020 Retrieved 11 March 2021 Parramatta Road Corridor Urban Transformation Strategy PDF Parramatta Road Urban Renewal Inner West Council www innerwest nsw gov au Retrieved 11 March 2021 National Route 32 OZROADS The Australian Roads Website 2013 Retrieved 1 June 2013 self published source National Routes OZROADS The Australian Roads Website 2013 Retrieved 1 June 2013 self published source Metroad 4 OZROADS The Australian Roads Website 2013 Retrieved 1 June 2013 self published source Metroad 5 OZROADS The Australian Roads Website 2013 Retrieved 1 June 2013 self published source External links editHistory of Parramatta Road Office of Environment amp Heritage 33 52 05 S 151 05 57 E 33 86814 S 151 09909 E 33 86814 151 09909 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parramatta Road amp oldid 1177448250, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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