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Princes Highway

Princes Highway is a major road in Australia, extending from Sydney via Melbourne to Adelaide through the states of New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia. It has a length of 1,941 kilometres (1,206 mi) (along Highway 1) or 1,898 kilometres (1,179 mi) via the former alignments of the highway,[citation needed] although these routes are slower and connections to the bypassed sections of the original route are poor in many cases.

Princes Highway

South Australia
General information
TypeHighway
Length1,898 km (1,179 mi)
Opened10 August 1920; 103 years ago (1920-08-10)[1]
GazettedJuly 1925 (VIC)[2]
August 1928 (NSW, as Main Road 1)[3]
Route number(s)See Route allocation
Former
route number
See Former routes
Major junctions
East end Great Western Highway
Ultimo, Sydney
 
West end Glen Osmond Road
Glen Osmond, Adelaide
Location(s)
Major settlementsWollongong, Nowra, Ulladulla, Batemans Bay, Eden, Orbost, Sale, Traralgon, Melbourne, Geelong, Warrnambool, Mount Gambier, Kingston SE, Tailem Bend, Murray Bridge, Crafers
Highway system

The highway follows the coastline for most of its length, and thus takes quite an indirect and lengthy route. For example, it is 1,040 kilometres (650 mi) from Sydney to Melbourne on Highway 1 as opposed to 870 kilometres (540 mi) on the more direct Hume Highway (National Highway 31), and 915 kilometres (569 mi) from Melbourne to Adelaide compared to 730 kilometres (450 mi) on the Western and Dukes Highways (National Highway 8). Because of the rural nature and lower traffic volumes over much of its length, Princes Highway is a more scenic and leisurely route than the main highways between these major cities.

Route edit

New South Wales edit

 
Princes Highway at Moruya.
 
Princes Highway at Eden.

Princes Highway starts at the junction of Broadway (Great Western Highway) and City Road in the Sydney suburb of Chippendale. City Road in fact forms the first section of the highway, and becomes King Street, Newtown, also part of Princes Highway. Where King Street ends at Sydney Park Road, Princes Highway continues in its own right.

The highway in this section is constructed as a six-lane divided carriageway, other than along King Street (four-lane undivided) and along the western edge of the Royal National Park, where it is built as four-lane dual carriageway.

The only major engineering structures along its route are the twin Tom Uglys Bridge across Georges River. The northbound bridge is of steel truss construction, opened in 1929, whilst the southbound bridge is of prestressed concrete girders, opened in 1987.

It runs through Sydney's southern suburbs (the St George area and Sutherland Shire), via Kogarah, Sutherland and Engadine to the village of Waterfall.

 
Princes Highway at Woonona

South of Waterfall the highway is paralleled by the 55-kilometre (34 mi) Princes Motorway (national route M1) to the top of Bulli Pass outside the city of Wollongong, which carries the majority of traffic. The Princes Highway then enters the northern suburbs of Wollongong and the Illawarra region via the Bulli Pass, whilst Mount Ousley Road, which is designated as part of national route 1, bypasses Wollongong's northern suburbs to meet the Princes Highway at Fairy Meadow, and carries inter-city traffic. Where Mount Ousley Road enters Wollongong, the Princes Motorway branches off Mount Ousley Road, and parallels the highway through the suburbs of Wollongong to Yallah.

The Mount Ousley Road-Princes Motorway route is the inter-city and main urban arterial through Wollongong's southern suburbs, whereas the Princes Highway acts as a local arterial.

From the interchange with the Princes Motorway at Yallah, the Princes Highway continues through the bypassed Albion Park Rail before reaching the southern terminus of the motorway at the Oak Flats interchange. From Oak Flats, the Princes Highway is dual carriageway, mostly of freeway standard, with the exception of the Kiama bends at Kiama Heights.

The highway then travels along the upgraded sections through Gerringong and Foxground before bypassing the town of Berry, where the highway follows larger gradients, compared to the flat terrain the Illawarra railway line follows immediately to the east.

Beyond Mullers Lane, Berry, the highway is a single two lane carriageway to Cambewarra Road, Bomaderry. Construction is underway for the duplication of the highway from Mullers Lane to Cambewarra Road and is expected to be completed in 2022.[4]

From Cambewarra Road the highway is four lane divided through Bomaderry and Nowra to near the junction with Warra Warra Road in South Nowra. Duplication to dual carriageway standard of a 6-kilometre (4 mi) length south from here to Forest Road was scheduled for completion in early 2014, following a three-month cessation of work while measures were put in place to protect a hitherto unknown area of habitat of the endangered green and golden bell frog.[5] Beyond this section is 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) of four lane single carriageway from Forest Road to the junction with Jervis Bay Road.

From Jervis Bay Road southward the highway is mostly single two lane carriageway along the NSW South Coast, passing through Ulladulla, Batemans Bay (where the 1-kilometre (0.6 mi) town centre bypass is built as dual carriageway), Moruya, Narooma, then bypassing Bega and Merimbula and passing through Eden, before crossing the border at the Black-Allen Line into Victoria, 550 kilometres (340 mi) from Sydney and 515 kilometres (320 mi) from Melbourne.

A substandard alignment at Victoria Creek 13 kilometres (8 mi) south of Narooma was upgraded in 2012–13, as well as the 3.5-kilometre (2.2 mi) Bega bypass. Realignments with associated new bridges are also proposed at Termeil Creek, some 30 kilometres (19 mi) south of Ulladulla, and Dignams Creek, some 20 kilometres (12 mi) south of Narooma. Current identified future projects are a bypass of Nowra-Bomaderry (definite route identified only for section south of Shoalhaven River), and a bypass of Ulladulla-Milton.

In 2007 the NRMA claimed Princes Highway was a dangerous road[6] with ten fatalities and 729 people injured on the highway between Sydney and the state border in 2006.[7]

Victoria edit

 
Princes Highway is picturesque in some towns, such as Bairnsdale, Victoria, where the median strip has been made a garden.

In Victoria, Princes Highway follows a very long and complex route. The route within metropolitan Melbourne carries the original individual names of sections of Princes Highway on signage. Each road section has Princes Highway labelled in bold and the individual name in brackets, such as Dandenong Road or Geelong Road.

Apart from the routes Alt National Route 1, C101 and C109 (in the outer metropolitan areas – such as Berwick and Werribee), the M1 Freeway route intersects (Monash Freeway/CityLink/West Gate Freeway/Princes Freeway) and this carries the much higher volume of traffic, including congestion in the peak periods, serving as the major, most direct and quickest route for Route 1 in Australia.

In Victoria the length from the South Australian border to the New South Wales border is 955 kilometres (593 mi). The highway passes (from east to west) through Orbost, Bairnsdale and Sale in the Gippsland region. The highway then passes through the Latrobe Valley, bypassing Morwell, Warragul and Pakenham to Dandenong and into the south-eastern suburbs of Melbourne. Most of this section is freeway standard, with the main outstanding work being a freeway bypass of Traralgon, although the highway through Traralgon has already been built to urban dual carriageway standard.

As the road passes through Melbourne, it first follows the route of Lonsdale Street (through Dandenong), then Dandenong Road to St Kilda, and Queens Road through Albert Park (this section of highway is shown in the 1969 Melbourne Transportation Plan as part of the F14 freeway corridor). Closer to Melbourne city centre, it follows the route of Kings Way, and then King Street through central Melbourne. It then follows Curzon Street after leaving the central business district to enter North Melbourne, and then follows Flemington Road northwest, then Racecourse Road, Smithfield Road and Ballarat Road. It starts again as Geelong Road where Geelong Road branches southwest off Ballarat Road, and Ballarat Road leads onto Western Freeway. The reason for the confusing dual naming of the highway through Melbourne is that it follows streets and roads which were already named when the highway was named in 1920.

Through much of Melbourne and its suburbs, the designation of National Route 1 is not along Princes Highway, but rather Monash Freeway, which intersects the Princes Highway on the eastern outskirts of Melbourne, then the southern link of the CityLink tollway, and then West Gate Freeway which bypasses central Melbourne. This avoids the confusing and congested arrangement of roads that is the Princes Highway in central Melbourne. The M1 include an advanced freeway management system for its entire 75-kilometre (47 mi) urban length, between Narre Warren and Werribee. Along with freeway sensors and associated data stations, overhead lane use management system (LUMS) gantries that show speed and lane availability, electronic message boards, real-time drive time signs and arterial road real-time Information signs (before the on-ramps); there are the 64+ ramp signal and metering sites. Hence, the majority of the on-ramps are traffic light controlled, depending on the density and speed of the traffic.

Heading towards Geelong in a south-west direction, the West Gate Freeway and Geelong Road join and become the Princes Freeway. Which, unusually for an Australian inter-city freeway, carries enough traffic to merit four to three lanes in either direction (often still being congested in the morning and afternoon peaks). On the northern outskirts of Geelong, the highway reverts from freeway to three lane dual carriageway through Geelong and its suburbs, with traffic light-controlled at-grade intersections. Through Geelong the highway is often heavily congested.

With the completion of the freeway standard Geelong Ring Road during 2008–9, the M1 route follows the freeway-standard road from Winchelsea to Traralgon, without encountering any traffic lights (with the exception of Yarragon and Trafalgar, which are yet to be bypassed). The ring road rejoins the original highway at Waurn Ponds on the western edge of Geelong.

Within Geelong, Princes Highway starts at the junction of Princes Freeway in the northern Geelong suburb of Corio, and runs through Geelong's northern and southern suburbs via an inner-city western bypass of the Geelong City Centre, to the current Highway 1 segment of the Princes Highway at Waurn Ponds in Geelong's southern suburbs. The highway is six lane dual carriageway from Corio to Latrobe Terrace, continuing as a four-lane dual carriageway to Waurn Ponds. The 1989 re-alignment of Princes Highway (along La Trobe Terrace) provides a dual carriageway, four-lane limited access road to replace the original route along Moorabool Street in South Geelong and High Street in Belmont. Upon the completion of the final section of the Geelong Ring Road, another section of the Princes Highway was superseded in 2013 at Waurn Ponds.

After Geelong the highway heads in a generally western direction, continuing with the 'M1' designation as a dual carriageway road to Winchelsea (opened 2015). West of Winchelsea, the road is presently being reconstructed to dual carriageway standard, passing through Colac, before reaching Camperdown - ultimately reaching the port of Warrnambool. The section from Geelong to Warrnambool runs inland, and so avoids the slower, but scenic Great Ocean Road. From here, Princes Highway passes through Portland before crossing the border into South Australia. At this point the highway is 1,530 kilometres (950 mi) from Sydney, 465 kilometres (289 mi) from Melbourne and 510 kilometres (320 mi) from Adelaide.

South Australia edit

At Mount Gambier the highway takes a more northward tack as the coast curves to the northwest, passing the Coorong National Park. After Kingston SE, it turns inland (north) to avoid the lakes at the mouth of the River Murray. Shortly before Tailem Bend it is joined by Dukes Highway, part of the main route between Melbourne and Adelaide. The highway then turns north-west and becomes South Eastern Freeway, crosses the Murray River, bypasses Murray Bridge and continues to Glen Osmond on Adelaide's southeastern outskirts.

At this point, Princes Highway is 6 kilometres (4 mi) from Adelaide and 2,055 kilometres (1,277 mi) from Sydney. It continues north-west via Glen Osmond Road to eventually terminate just south of the Adelaide city centre.

History edit

The section of Princes Highway between West Helensburgh and Bulli Tops was the original coastal route between Sydney and Wollongong, first used in 1843.[citation needed] From Bulli Tops this route continued south along today's Mount Ousley Road as far south as Mount Keira Road, and then followed Mount Keira Road around the west of Mount Keira. This route replaced the inland route from Sydney via Liverpool, Campbelltown, Appin to Bulli Tops.

As a named route, the highway came into being when pre-existing roads were renamed Prince's Highway after the planned visit to Australia by the Prince of Wales (later to become king Edward VIII and, after abdicating, the Duke of Windsor) in 1920. The original submissions in January 1920 were in order for the Prince to have the opportunity during his visit to make the trip from Melbourne to Sydney overland along the route. Different routes were considered, including the inland route via Yass.[8] That idea never came to fruition, due partly to the limited amount of time and the cost of upgrading the road to a suitable standard for him to undertake the trip. The Prince did, however, give his permission for the naming.[1]

The highway had opening ceremonies in both New South Wales and Victoria during 1920. The first section of road from Melbourne was opened on 10 August in Warragul.[1] The road from Sydney was opened in Bulli on 19 October, by the NSW Minister for Local Government, Thomas Mutch.[9]

Within New South Wales, the passing of the Main Roads Act of 1924[10] through the Parliament of New South Wales provided for the declaration of Main Roads, roads partially funded by the State government through the Main Roads Board (later the Department of Main Roads, and eventually Transport for NSW). Main Road No. 1 was declared along Prince's Highway on 8 August 1928, heading south from the City of Sydney through Sutherland, Wollongong, Nowra, Bateman's Bay and Eden to the southern boundary of the state towards Genoa in Victoria (for a total of 351.5 miles).[3] With the passing of the Main Roads (Amendment) Act of 1929[11] to provide for additional declarations of State Highways and Trunk Roads, this was amended to State Highway 1 on 8 April 1929. Before the adoption of the "Prince's Highway" name in 1920, the road between Sydney and the border was referred to as the Coast Road.[12]

Within Victoria, approval was given by the Victorian executive in January 1922 to extend the highway west from Melbourne through Geelong, Camperdown, Warrnambool and Portland to the South Australian border.[13] The passing of the Highways and Vehicles Act of 1924[14] through the Parliament of Victoria provided for the declaration of State Highways, roads two-thirds financed by the State government through the Country Roads Board (later VicRoads). Prince's Highway was declared a State Highway on 1 July 1925,[2] traversing the whole length of the State from its western boundary near Mount Gambier in South Australia, through Port Fairy, Warrnambool, Geelong to Melbourne, through Dandenong, Warragul, Sale, Bairnsdale and Orbost to the eastern boundary of the state towards Eden in New South Wales (for a total of 540 miles); before the adoption of the "Prince's Highway" name in 1920, the road between Melbourne and Bairnsdale was referred to as (Main) Gippsland Road, between Bairnsdale and the NSW border as Orbost-Genoa Road and Genoa-Eden Road, and between Melbourne and Port Fairy as Melbourne-Geelong Road, Geelong-Warrnambool Road and Warrnambool-Port Fairy Road.[15]

Within South Australia, roads from Adelaide to the South Australian border with Victoria were renamed by the State government in February 1922.[16] At that time, the route from Adelaide was via Aldgate, Mylor, Macclesfield, Strathalbyn, Langhorne Creek, crossing the Murray River at Wellington, then continuing along the present towns of Meningie, Kingston SE, Robe, Beachport, Millicent and Gambier Town (Mount Gambier).[17] By 1928, the route went through Mount Barker and Wistow to Langhorne Creek.[18] By 1935, the Princes Highway passed through Nairne and Kanmantoo,[19] Murray Bridge and Tailem Bend (now known as the Old Princes Highway). That road was superseded by the South Eastern Freeway (Crafers-Murray Bridge in stages 1967–1979), Swanport Bridge (1979), finally extended from Crafers to Glen Osmond (2000). The section between Kingston SE and Millicent has also been replaced by a more direct inland route. The coastal route through Robe and Beachport is now route B101, the Southern Ports Highway.

In 1942, as part of wartime defence measures, a road was built from Mount Keira Road to Fairy Meadow. This route forms part of Mount Ousley Road.[citation needed]

The passing of the Roads Act of 1993[20] through the Parliament of New South Wales updated road classifications and the way they could be declared within New South Wales. Under this act, Princes Highway today retains its declaration as Highway 1, from the intersection with Broadway in Chippendale in Sydney, to the state border with Victoria.[21]

The passing of the Road Management Act 2004[22] through the Parliament of Victoria granted the responsibility of overall management and development of Victoria's major arterial roads to VicRoads: VicRoads re-declared the road in 2010 as Princes Highway West (Arterial #6500), beginning at the state border with South Australia to Geelong, then from Altona North to Parkville;[23] and in 2008 as Princes Highway East (Arterial #6510), beginning at the Melbourne CBD to Narre Warren, then through Yarragon, Trafalgar and Morwell, the from Morwell to the state border with New South Wales.[24]

In August 2011, the stretch of the highway in South Australia between Adelaide and Port Augusta (commonly referred to as "Highway 1") was renamed Port Wakefield Highway (between Adelaide and Port Wakefield) and Augusta Highway (between Port Wakefield and Port Augusta) as part of a process to standardise the rural property addressing system across the state.[25]

Timeline of significant upgrades and bypasses edit

Timeline of significant upgrades and bypasses
Date Project State Length Value Comments Notes
km mi
1940 Laverton deviation VIC 9.7 6 The construction of a deviation 6 miles in length (from Kororoit Creek Road, Altona to Old Geelong Road, Hoppers Crossing) was commenced on behalf of the Department of the Interior. The work includes the erection of a bridge over the railway near Laverton station; the new road opened to traffic some time after 30 June 1940. [26]
1961 Maltby By-pass Road (Werribee bypass) VIC 10.5 6.5 950,000 Opened on 16 June 1961 by the Hon. Sir Thomas Maltby ED, MP, Minister of Public Works, the route was named the 'Maltby By-pass Road' by then Premier of Victoria, Henry Bolte MP. It was Victoria's first controlled-access highway, or 'freeway', as such roads are now generally known in Victoria. 'It is a 4-lane divided highway, 6.5 miles in route length, with no access from adjoining property or cross roads over its entire length'. [27]
1959–1962 Club Terrace Loop VIC 16.50 10.25 Beginning in 1959, construction of the Club Terrace Loop deviation was completed in 1962, providing a completely new road diverting traffic from a 15-mile length of narrow, sub-standard road passing through the township of Club Terrace, west of Cann River [28][29]
1959–1963 North–South Motorway (Princes Motorway) NSW From North Wollongong to West Wollongong, the Motorway was opened in stages, replacing Princes Highway as main north–south route [citation needed]
1964 Connector road NSW The road, from Mount Ousley Road to the North–South Motorway at Gwynneville, was opened to traffic. [citation needed]
1967 Princes Highway East, near Mount Drummer VIC 8.9 5.5 A ceremony, sponsored by Orbost Shire Council, at Genoa, was held on 17 January 1967. [30]
1967 South Eastern Freeway (Stage 1) SA Bypassed Crafers and Stirling. [citation needed]
1969 Moe bypass VIC 6.1 3.8 A dual-lane, 24 feet (7.3 m)-wide single carriageway has been constructed, with earthworks and grade separated structures to accommodate future duplicate pavements [31]
1972 Haunted Hills section VIC 4.2 2.6 Second carriageway opened between Gunn's Gully and Hernes Oak. [32]
1973 Road duplication VIC 6.4 4 Dual carriageway from East Warrnambool to Allansford. [33]
1974 Rail crossing elimination VIC 1.1 0.7 $3.8 million Reconstruction of bridges over railway and grade separation of connecting roads (Gordon Street), Footscray [33][34]
1975 NSW Princes Highway from Waterfall to Bulli Tops, superseded by the opening of Southern Freeway. [citation needed]
1976 Snowy River Bridge, Princes Freeway, Orbost VIC 8.4 5.2 A$2.4 million Opened by the Hon. J A Rafferty, Minister for Transport, 25 November 1976. The bridge was the first of four bridges to be built as part of the freeway bypass of Orbost.
It's interesting to note the reference to a 'freeway', given that the entire bypass is a single two-lane carriageway and is not controlled access. The CRB's own definition of a freeway can be found in most of their annual reports dating back to the 1960s: 'A freeway is a road having dual carriageways with no direct access from adjoining properties and side roads. All crossings of a freeway are by means of overpass or underpass bridges, and traffic enters or leaves the freeway carriageways by means of carefully designed ramps'.
[35][36]
1979 Swanport Bridge SA Completed the South Eastern Freeway to bypass Murray Bridge. [citation needed]
1981 Drouin bypass VIC 7 4.3 A$12 million From Robin Hood to the 'existing' highway east of Drouin, with 'two lanes each direction, plus emergency stopping lanes'. Opened 12 February 1981, by the Hon. J C M Balfour, MP. [37]
1983 Berwick bypass VIC 7.3 4.5 A$19.6 million Opened on 14 December 1983 by the Federal Minister for Transport, the Hon. Peter Morris MP, and the Victorian Assistant Minister of Transport, the Hon. Jack Simpson MP. This road bypass was from the Princes Highway, near Hessle Road, to Pink Hill, Beaconsfield. [38]
1985 Warragul bypass VIC 9 5.6 A$23 million From the end of the Drouin Bypass to Nilma, opened on 12 December 1985 by the Federal Minister for Transport, the Hon. Peter Morris MP, and the Victorian Minister of Transport, the Hon. Tom Roper MP. [39]
1987 Road duplication VIC 9 5.6 A$16 million Nar Nar Goon to Garfield duplication opened 10 April 1987. [40]
1989 Road duplication VIC Garfield to Bunyip River duplication completed in June 1989. [41]
1992 Morwell bypass VIC Bypass opened to traffic in April 1992. [42]
1994 Longwarry section duplication VIC 7.8 4.8 A$25 million Duplication completed between Bunyip River and Robin Hood in January 1994. [43]
1995 Road duplication VIC Duplicated section between Trafalgar East to Moe opened in August 1995. [44]
1997 Road duplication VIC 7 4.3 Yarragon to Trafalgar duplication opened to traffic on 2 May 1997, completing a dual carriageway highway from Melbourne to Traralgon. [45]
2000 Heysen Tunnels SA The tunnel replaced Mount Barker Road (through Eagle On The Hill), extending the Adelaide end of South Eastern Freeway from Crafers to Glen Osmond. [citation needed]
2002 Oak Flats Interchange NSW The project was opened on 29 October 2001. The interchange was designed to significantly improve traffic flow around the Albion Park/Oak Flats section of the Princes Highway by removing a railway level crossing and nearby traffic signals. 'The interchange also connects with Shellharbour City Council's East-West Link Road'. [46]
2002 Geelong Road upgrade VIC Upgrades completed from the West Gate Bridge to Lara. The Hoppers Crossing to Corio section was widened from two lanes to three in each direction, improvements to interchanges and flood management were made, and central wire rope barriers were installed. The speed limit between Werribee and Corio was decreased from 110 km/h to 100 km/h. [47]
2005 Kiama bypass NSW A$179 million Opened to traffic on 28 November 2005. The North Kiama Bypass linked the Kiama Bypass in the south and the Princes Highway near Dunmore in the north. [48]
2007 Pakenham bypass VIC 20 12 A$242 million Opened to traffic in December 2007, funded jointly by the state and federal governments. [49]
2008 Geelong Ring Road VIC Corio to Hamilton Highway, Fyansford opened 14 December 2008. [50]
2009 Geelong Ring Road VIC A$380 million Hamilton Highway, Fyansford to Waurn Ponds opened 14 June 2009, six months ahead of schedule. The project from Corio to Waurn Ponds was funded jointly by the state and federal governments. [50]
2009 Road duplication NSW A$108 million Oak Flats to Dunmore dual carriageways opened to traffic in October 2009, completing a four-lane route between Sydney and south of Kiama. [51]
2013 Geelong Ring Road VIC Anglesea Road to Princes Highway opened to traffic in February 2013. [52]
2013 Road duplication VIC 4 2.5 Wurruk to Sale duplication opened June 2013. [52]
2015 Road duplication VIC 30 19 From Waurn Ponds to Winchelsea. [53]
2019–2021 Albion Park Rail Bypass NSW 9.8 6.1 A$630 million The northbound lanes of the Albion Park Rail Bypass opened on 7 August 2021. The southbound lanes of the Albion Park Rail Bypass opened on 9 October 2021, completing the 'missing link' in the high standard road between Heathcote and Bomaderry. [54]

Projects edit

List of projects on the Princes Highway in New South Wales
Project Length Construction Value Status Notes
km mi Start Complete
Bulli Pass upgrade 1.1 0.68 In progress [55][56]
Albion Park Rail bypass 9.8 6.1 November 2018 October 2021 $630 million Complete [54][55]
Oak Flats to Dunmore upgrade June 2007 October 2009 $108 million Complete [55][57]
North Kiama bypass 7.6 4.7 November 2003 October 2005 $141 million Complete [55][58]
Kiama On and Off Ramps (Northbound and Southbound) 2008/2009 $8 million Complete [55]
Gerringong upgrade 7.5 4.7 July 2012 August 2015 $340 million Complete [55][59][60]
Foxground and Berry bypass 11.6 7.2 January 2015 June 2017 $580 million Complete [55][61][62][63][64]
Berry to Bomaderry upgrade 11.5 7.1 September 2018 2022 (estimated) $450 million In progress [55][65]
Nowra Bridge study (southbound) In planning [55]
South Nowra upgrade – Kingorne Street to Forest Road 6.3 3.9 November 2011 March 2014 $62 million Complete [55][66][67][68]
Forest Road to Jervis Bay Road 23.5 14.6 December 2008 $23.5 million Complete [55][69]
Conjola Mountain realignment 2.3 1.4 September 2008 April 2010 $58 million Complete [55][70]
Burrill Lake Bridge replacement Early 2018 $58 million Complete [55][71]
Termeil Creek realignment 1.6 0.99 February 2015 Mid 2016 $21 million Complete [55][60][72]
Nangudga Bridge replacement December 2011 $3.7 million Complete [55]
Victoria Creek upgrade 3.2 2.0 June 2011 March 2013 $35 million Complete [55][73]
Dignams Creek upgrade 2.0 1.2 Early 2017 April 2019 $45 million Complete [55]
Bega bypass 3.6 2.2 June 2012 December 2013 $55 million Complete [55][74][75]
Pambula River Bridge replacement 3.5 2.2 August 2006 March 2008 $17 million Complete [55][76]

Route allocation edit

Princes Highway was signed National Route 1 across its entire length in 1955. The Whitlam government introduced the federal National Roads Act 1974,[77] where roads declared as a National Highway were still the responsibility of the states for road construction and maintenance, but were fully compensated by the Federal government for money spent on approved projects.[77]: S7  As an important interstate link between the capitals of South Australia and Victoria, the parts of Princes Highway not already replaced by South Eastern Freeway between Adelaide and Tailem Bend were declared a National Highway in 1974. With all three states' conversion to their newer alphanumeric systems between the late 1990s to the early 2010s, its former route number for the most part was updated to A1 for the highway within Victoria (in 1997), South Australia (in 1998), and eventually the New South Wales section (in 2013),[78] but with many exceptions: see below.

Due to its history of bypasses, many sections of Princes Highway today have different route allocations. These allocations, from its northern terminus in Sydney to its western terminus in Adelaide, are:

Route allocations on the Princes Highway
Route
allocation
Road name(s) Start point End point Distance Cumulative
distance
Notes
km mi km mi
  A36 City Road
King Street
Princes Highway
Broadway Junction with President Avenue, Kogarah 11.3 7.0 11.3 7.0 [79]
  A1 Princes Highway Junction with President Avenue, Kogarah South of Waterfall, with exit as the Princes Highway to Helensburgh 27.8 17.3 39.1 24.3 [80]
undesignated Princes Highway (superseded route) South of Waterfall Maddens Plains 20.9 13.0 60.0 37.3 [81]
  B65 Princes Highway (superseded route) Junction with Lawrence Hargrave Drive, Thirroul Junction with Memorial Drive, Bulli 2.9 1.8 62.9 39.1 [82]
undesignated Princes Highway (superseded route) Junction with Memorial Drive, Bulli Oak Flats Interchange 34.5 21.4 97.4 60.5 [83]
  M1 Princes Motorway South of Waterfall Oak Flats Interchange 62.3 38.7 101.4 63.0 [84]
  A1 Princes Highway Oak Flats Interchange Black-Allan Line
NSW/Victorian border
415 258 516.4 320.9 [85]
  A1 Princes Highway Victorian/NSW border Traralgon
  M1 Princes Freeway * Traralgon Narre Warren
  C101 Princes Highway (superseded route, Pakenham) Nar Nar Goon Narre Warren
with 'brief old-freeway', link highway at Beaconsfield
  Alternate National Route 1 Princes Highway Narre Warren Southbank (at West Gate Freeway east terminus)
  Metro Route 60 Kings Way
King Street
Southbank West Melbourne (Victoria Street)
  Metro Route 60 Curzon Street
Harker Street
West Melbourne Parkville (near North Melbourne)
  Metro Route 60 Flemington Road Parkville (near North Melbourne) Parkville (near CityLink (west))
  Metro Route 83 Geelong Road (Princes Highway) Parkville Laverton North
  M1 Princes Freeway
(Maltby Bypass Geelong Ring Road) *
Laverton North Geelong (Mount Moriac)
  C109 Princes Highway (superseded route, Werribee) Werribee (near Point Cook and Hoppers Crossing) near Old Geelong Road Werribee (near Cocoroc)
  A10 Princes Highway (superseded route, Geelong)
Latrobe Terrace
Settlement Road
Colac Road
Corio (near Avalon) Waurn Ponds
(near Town centre, former West alignment now Waurn Ponds Drive but closed at freeway far-west terminus)
  A1 Princes Highway Geelong Victorian/South Australian border
  A1 Princes Highway South Australian/Victorian border Mount Gambier
  B1 Princes Highway Mount Gambier Tailem Bend
  B101
(former alt route)
Southern Ports Highway Millicent Kingston SE
  A1 Princes Highway Tailem Bend Murray Bridge
  M1 South Eastern Freeway/Princes Highway Murray Bridge Glen Osmond
  B55
(borrowed) (White Hill – Murray Bridge East)
undesignated
(Murray Bridge East – Long Flat)
Adelaide Road/Bridge Street/Old Princes Highway (Karoonda Highway)
Old Princes Highway (Murray Bridge)
Long Flat White Hill
undesignated Old Princes Highway (Nairne, Kanmantoo, Callington (north), Monarto) White Hill Littlehampton
Mount Barker

*The gap between the two stages of Princes Freeway are taken up by either a series of unrelatedly named motorways namely Monash Freeway, or largely by Princes Highway.

Former routes edit

Within New South Wales, Princes Highway formerly entered Wollongong as State Route 60 down the Bulli Pass and ran a largely separate route from Bulli and Thirroul through to the southern suburbs from the parallel Princes Motorway, the latter of which today is designated part of route M1.[86] The gazetted route of Princes Highway today differs from the route of State Route 60 (and from that shown on road signs).[87][88] The gazetted route was designated State Route 60 (now part of route B65, Memorial Drive) for its length, but deviated from the road that is signposted as Princes Highway between Bellambi and North Wollongong.

Major intersections edit

New South Wales edit

Sydney (City Road) edit

Victoria edit

East edit

LGALocationkmmiDestinationsNotes
  Princes Highway (A1) – Sydney
New South Wales – Victoria state border
  Mallacoota-Genoa Road
  Monaro Highway (B23) – Canberra
  Combienbar Road
  Cabbage Tree-Conran Road
  Lochiel Street
  Bruthen-Nowa Nowa Road
  Metung Road
  Swan Reach Road
  Great Alpine Road
  Paynesville Road
  Service Street
  Bairnsdale-Dargo Road
  Bengworden Road
  Lindenow South Road
  Stratford-Bengworden Road
  Briagolong Road
  Stratford-Maffra Road
  Bengworden Road
  Maffra-Sale Road
  Raglan Street
  South Gippsland Highway
  Sale-Heyfield Road
  Maffra-Rosedale Road
  Rosedale-Heyfield Road
  Lyons Street
  Princes Freeway (M1) – Melbourne

Melbourne (Narre Warren–Southbank) edit

LGALocationkmmiDestinationsNotes
CaseyNarre WarrenBerwick boundary00.0  Princes Highway (C101 east) – Berwick
  Princes Freeway (M1 southeast), Warragul
  Monash Freeway (M1 northwest) – City
Diamond interchange
Narre Warren1.20.75  Narre Warren North Road (C404 north) – Belgrave
  Narre Warren-Cranbourne Road (C404 south) – Cranbourne
Hallam4.93.0Hallam South Road (south) – Hallam
  Belgrave-Hallam Road (B675 north) – Endeavour Hills
Casey-Greater Dandenong boundaryDandenong SouthHallamEumemmerring tripoint6.74.2  South Gippsland Freeway (M420) – City, HastingsDiamond interchange
Greater DandenongDandenongDandenong South boundary95.6South Gippsland Highway – Phillip Island
Dandenong9.86.1  Frankston-Dandenong Road (Metro Route 9) – Frankston
10.76.6  Foster Street (Metro Route 9 east) – Rowville
  Foster Street (Metro Route 10 west) – Mentone
13.68.5To   Heatherton Road (Metro Route 14) – Noble Park, Endeavour Hills
Dandenong NorthDandenongNoble ParkNoble Park North quadripoint13.88.6  EastLink (M3) – Ringwood, FrankstonDiamond interchange
Monash-Greater Dandenong boundaryMulgraveSpringvale boundary18.911.7  Police Road (Metro Route 16 east) – Mulgrave
  Centre Road (Metro Route 16 west) – Brighton East
Springvale Junction
1912  Springvale Road (Metro Route 40) – Springvale, Glen Waverley
ClaytonSpringvale boundary20.412.7  Westall Road (Metro Route 49) – Springvale South
MonashClayton20.913.0  Blackburn Road (Metro Route 13) – Blackburn
22.213.8  Wellington Road (Metro Route 18 east) – Rowville
  North Road (Metro Route 18 west) – Oakleigh
ClaytonOakleigh East boundary  Clayton Road (Metro Route 23) – Clayton, Burwood
OakleighOakleigh EastHuntingdale tripoint  Huntingdale Road (Metro Route 47) – Huntingdale
OakleighOakleigh East boundary  Ferntree Gully Road (Metro Route 22) – Ferntree GullyConcurrency with Metro Route 22
Monash-Stonnington boundaryOakleighMalvern EastHughesdale tripoint  Warrigal Road (Metro Route 15)
Glen Eira-Stonnington boundaryCarnegieMalvern EastMurrumbeena tripoint  Murrumbeena Road (Metro Route 22 south)
Belgrave Road
Caulfield EastMalvern EastCarnegie tripoint  Grange Road (Metro Route 17)Concurrency with Metro Route 17
Caulfield EastMalvern East boundary  Burke Road (Metro Route 17)
Caulfield NorthMalvern boundary  Glenferrie Road (Metro Route 19 north) – HawthornConcurrency with Metro Route 19
  Hawthorn Road (Metro Route 19 south) – Caulfield
Port Phillip-Stonnington boundarySt Kilda EastPrahranWindsor tripoint  Hotham Street (Metro Route 25 south)
  Williams Road (Metro Route 25 north)
St KildaWindsor boundaryChapel Street
  St Kilda Road (Metro Route 3)
  Punt Road (Metro Route 29)
Port PhillipMelbourne CBDAlbert Park boundary  Lorne Street (Metro Route 24)
Melbourne CBD  Toorak Road (Metro Route 26 east) – ToorakConcurrency with Metro Route 26
Melbourne CBDSouth Melbourne boundary  Albert Road (Metro Route 26 west)
Port Phillip-Melbourne boundarySouthbank  West Gate Freeway (M1), Geelong
  CityLink (M1), Dandenong
  Kings Way (Metro Route 60) – City

Melbourne (Southbank–Laverton North) edit

LGALocationkmmiDestinationsNotes
  Kings Way (Alt National Route 1) – Dandenong
  CityLink (M1 east) – Dandenong
Moray Street
Whiteman Street
  Flinders Street (Metro Route 30)
Flinders Lane
Collins Street
Little Collins Street
Bourke Street
Little Bourke Street
Lonsdale Street
Little Lonsdale Street
La Trobe Street
   Dudley Street (Metro Routes 32/55)
Hawke Street
Victoria Street
Queensberry Street
Arden Street
  Flemington Road (Metro Route 60)
Abbotsford Street
  Elliott Avenue (Metro Route 83) – Parkville
  Flemington Road (Metro Route 60) – Flemington
Boundary Road, Travancore, North Melbourne
  CityLink (M2) Docklands, Port Melbourne
Stubbs Street – Kensington
Racecourse Road, Ascot Vale
  Epsom Road (Metro Route 35), Kensington, Ascot Vale
  Moore Street (Metro Route 35)
  Ballarat Road (Metro Route 8)
Droop Street
Barkly Street
  Gordon Street (Metro Route 37)
  Buckley Street (Metro Route 32)
  Geelong Street (Metro Route 37)
  Somerville Road (Metro Route 50 east)
  Millers Road (Metro Route 41 south)
Francis Street (east)
   McDonald Road (Metro Routes 39/41)
  Grieve Parade (Metro Route 39)
Little Boundary Road
  Princes Freeway (M1), Geelong
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
  •       Route transition


West edit

LGALocationkmmiDestinationsNotes
  Geelong Ring Road (M1) – Melbourne
  Cape Otway Road (C135 south)
  Devon Road (C111 north)
  Inverleigh-Winchelsea Road (C145)
  Winchelsea-Deans Marsh Road (C151)
  Birregurra Road (C119)
  Warncoort-Birregurra Road (C152)
  Colac-Ballarat Road (C146)
  Queen Street (C154)
  Corangamite Street (C155)
  Corangamite Lake Road (C147)
  Timboon-Colac Road (C163)
  Cobden-Stonyford Road (C149)
  Camperdown-Cobden Road (C164)
   Camperdown-Lismore Road (C164/C165)
  Darlington-Camperdown Road (C173)
  Mackinnons Bridge Road (C158)
  Terang-Mortlake Road (C156)
  Cobden-Terang Road (C156)
  Ayresford Road (C168)
  Great Ocean Road (B100)
  Hopkins Highway (B120)
  Caramut Road (C174)
  Southern Cross Road (C177)
  Koroit-Port Fairy Road (C179)
  Penshurst-Port Fairy Road (C178)
  Hamilton-Port Fairy Road (C184)
  Tyrendarra-Ettrick Road (C191)
  Henty Highway (A200 south) – Portland
  Woolsthorpe-Heywood Road (C176)
  Henty Highway (A200 north)
  Portland-Casterton Road (C195)
  Dartmoor-Hamilton Road (C187)
South Australia – Victoria state border
  Princes Highway (A1) – Adelaide

South Australia edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "PRINCE'S HIGHWAY". The Argus. Melbourne: National Library of Australia. 11 August 1920. p. 9. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
  2. ^ a b "Country Roads Board Victoria. Twelfth Annual Report: for the year ended 30 June 1925". Country Roads Board of Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 31 December 1925. p. 3.
  3. ^ a b "Main Roads Act, 1924-1927". Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. No. 110. National Library of Australia. 17 August 1928. pp. 3814–20. from the original on 3 August 2022. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
  4. ^ Transport for NSW, N. S. W. "Berry to Bomaderry - Princes Highway upgrade". Transport for NSW. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  5. ^ "Work to restart at South Nowra" (PDF). Roads & Maritime Services (Press release). 22 March 2012. Retrieved 18 May 2012. Work was suspended in November 2011 and since then Roads & Maritime Services has been working to ensure the frogs are protected while the work is carried out, NSW Roads Minister Duncan Gay said.
  6. ^ "Princes Highway ignored by NSW govt: NRMA". ABC News. Australia. 22 June 2007. Retrieved 5 February 2008. NRMA managing director Alan Evans says the highway is one of the most dangerous in the state and he is disappointed that it has been ignored.
  7. ^ (PDF). Crash statistics. New South Wales Road Traffic Authority. 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 August 2008. Retrieved 5 February 2008. (see Table 25: pages 58–59)
  8. ^ "MELBOURNE-SYDNEY ROAD". The Argus. Melbourne: National Library of Australia. 24 January 1920. p. 18. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
  9. ^ "PRINCE'S HIGHWAY". The Sydney Morning Herald. National Library of Australia. 20 October 1920. p. 12. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
  10. ^ State of New South Wales, An Act to provide for the better construction, maintenance, and financing of main roads; to provide for developmental roads; to constitute a Main Roads Board 11 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine 10 November 1924
  11. ^ State of New South Wales, An Act to amend the Main Roads Act, 1924-1927; to confer certain further powers upon the Main Roads Board; to amend the Local Government Act, 1919, and certain other Acts; to validate certain payments and other matters; and for purposes connected therewith. 12 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine 8 April 1929
  12. ^ "Main Roads Board of New South Wales Annual Report: Volume 1, number 1" (PDF). Main Roads Board of New South Wales. Vol. 1, no. 1. Sydney: OpenGov NSW. September 1929. pp. 20–2.
  13. ^ "PRINCE'S HIGHWAY". The Argus. Melbourne: National Library of Australia. 25 January 1922. p. 12. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
  14. ^ State of Victoria, An Act to make further provision with respect to Highways and Country Roads Motor Cars and Traction Engines and for other purposes 30 December 1924
  15. ^ "Country Roads Board Victoria. Second Annual Report". Country Roads Board of Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 1 November 1915. pp. 15–7, 19, 21, 28, 30–2.
  16. ^ "THE PRINCE'S HIGHWAY". The Register. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 10 February 1922. p. 6. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
  17. ^ "PRINCE'S HIGHWAY". The News. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 18 October 1924. p. 9 Edition: Sporting Edition. Retrieved 13 February 2015.
  18. ^ "SOUTH-EASTERN DISTRICT COUNCILS' ASSOCIATION". The Narracoorte Herald. SA: National Library of Australia. 28 August 1928. p. 4. Retrieved 13 February 2015.
  19. ^ "519 Men Engaged On Road Work". The Advertiser. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 20 June 1935. p. 10. Retrieved 13 February 2015.
  20. ^ State of New South Wales, An Act to make provision with respect to the roads of New South Wales; to repeal the State Roads Act 1986, the Crown and Other Roads Act 1990 and certain other enactments; and for other purposes. 11 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine 10 November 1924
  21. ^ Transport for NSW (August 2022). "Schedule of Classified Roads and Unclassified Regional Roads" (PDF). Government of New South Wales. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
  22. ^ State Government of Victoria. "Road Management Act 2004" (PDF). Government of Victoria. (PDF) from the original on 18 October 2021. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  23. ^ VicRoads. "VicRoads – Register of Public Roads (Part A) 2015" (PDF). Government of Victoria. pp. 976–8. from the original on 1 May 2020. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  24. ^ VicRoads. "VicRoads – Register of Public Roads (Part A) 2015" (PDF). Government of Victoria. pp. 979–83. from the original on 1 May 2020. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  25. ^ "Highways renamed in SA". Logistics, Trucking and Transport News – Prime Mover Magazine. Retrieved 17 November 2012.
  26. ^ "Country Roads Board Victoria. Twenty-Seventh Annual Report: for the year ended 30 June 1940". Country Roads Board of Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 18 November 1940. p. 6.
  27. ^ Country Roads Board Victoria. Forty-eighth annual report for the year ended 30th June, 1961, Melbourne, Victoria: Government Printer, 1961. p. 20.
  28. ^ "Country Roads Board Victoria. Forty-Sixth Annual Report: for the year ended 30 June 1959". Country Roads Board of Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 27 November 1959. p. 21.
  29. ^ "Country Roads Board Victoria. Fifty-Fourth Annual Report: for the year ended 30 June 1967". Country Roads Board of Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 12 January 1968. p. 14.
  30. ^ Country Roads Board Victoria. Fifty-Fourth Annual Report: for the year ended 30th June, 1967, Burwood, Victoria: Brown, Prior, Anderson, 1968. p. 13
  31. ^ Country Roads Board Victoria. Fifty-Sixth Annual Report: for the year ended 30th June, 1969, Burwood, Victoria: Brown, Prior, Anderson, 1970. p. 5, 10
  32. ^ Country Roads Board Victoria. Fifty-Ninth Report: for the year ended 30th June, 1972, Burwood, Victoria: Brown, Prior, Anderson, 1972. p. 9
  33. ^ a b "Country Roads Board Victoria. Sixtieth Annual Report: for the year ended 30 June 1973". Country Roads Board of Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 1 November 1973. pp. 7, 24.
  34. ^ "Country Roads Board Victoria. Sixty-First Annual Report: for the year ended 30 June 1974". Country Roads Board of Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 1 November 1974. p. 24.
  35. ^ Country Roads Board Victoria. Sixty-Fourth Annual Report: for the year ended 30th June, 1977, Burwood, Victoria: Brown, Prior, Anderson, 1977. p. 7
  36. ^ Country Roads Board Victoria. 69th Annual Report. 1981-1982, Kew, Victoria: Country Roads Board Victoria, 1982. p. 24
  37. ^ Country Roads Board Victoria. 68th Annual Report. 1980-1981, Kew, Victoria: Country Roads Board Victoria, 1981. p. 10
  38. ^ Road Construction Authority Victoria, 1st Annual Report 1983-84, Kew, Victoria: Road Construction Authority, Victoria, 1984. p. 10
  39. ^ "Road Construction Authority of Victoria. Annual Report for the year ended 30 June 1986". Road Construction Authority of Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 24 November 1986. p. 7.
  40. ^ Road Construction Authority Victoria, Annual Report 1986-87, Kew, Victoria: Road Construction Authority, Victoria, 1987. p. 64
  41. ^ Road Construction Authority Victoria, Annual Report 1988-1989, Kew, Victoria: Road Construction Authority, Victoria, 1989. p. 45
  42. ^ VicRoads. VicRoads Annual Report 1992-93, Kew, Victoria: VicRoads, 1993, p. 43
  43. ^ VicRoads. VicRoads Annual Report 1993-94, Kew, Victoria: VicRoads, 1994, p. 15
  44. ^ VicRoads. VicRoads Annual Report 1995-96, Kew, Victoria: VicRoads, 1996, p. 15
  45. ^ VicRoads. VicRoads Annual Report 1996-97, Kew, Victoria: VicRoads, 1997, p. 16
  46. ^ Roads and Traffic Authority NSW. Annual report 2002, Sydney, New South Wales: RTA, 2002. p. 38
  47. ^ Viseth Uch. 2007. M1 – Princes Freeway / Highway West. [ONLINE] Available at: http://mrv.ozroads.com.au/. [Accessed 21 February 2018].
  48. ^ Roads and Traffic Authority NSW. Annual report 2006, Sydney, New South Wales: RTA, 2006. p. 26
  49. ^ VicRoads. VicRoads Annual Report 2007-08, Kew, Victoria: VicRoads, 2008, p. 35
  50. ^ a b VicRoads. VicRoads Annual Report 2008-09. Kew, Victoria: VicRoads, 2009, p. 43
  51. ^ Roads and Traffic Authority NSW. Annual report 2009-10, Sydney, New South Wales: RTA, 2010. p. 26
  52. ^ a b VicRoads. Annual Report 2012-13, Kew, Victoria: VicRoads, 2013, p. 20
  53. ^ "VicRoads Annual Report 2014-15". VicRoads. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 3 September 2015. p. 13.
  54. ^ a b Transport for NSW, N. S. W. "Albion Park Rail bypass - Princes Highway upgrade". Transport for NSW. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  55. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s "Princes Highway upgrades". Roads & Maritime Services. Government of New South Wales. February 2014. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  56. ^ "Bulli Pass". NSW Roads and Maritime Services. 14 March 2017. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
  57. ^ "Oak Flats to Dunmore Realignment". Cordell Construction Projects.
  58. ^ "North Kiama By-pass". Princes Highway Priority Projects. Princes Highway Taskforce. 27 August 2004. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  59. ^ "Gerringong upgrade" (PDF). Roads & Maritime Services. Government of New South Wales. June 2014. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  60. ^ a b "A1 Princes Highway / M1 Princes Motorway upgrades" (PDF). Roads & Maritime Services. Government of New South Wales. May 2016. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  61. ^ "Foxground and Berry bypass". Transport for NSW - Roads & Maritime. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  62. ^ "Project Update" (PDF). Roads & Maritime Services. Government of New South Wales.
  63. ^ Arnold, Alex (3 November 2014). "Berry bypass on way as homes demolished". Illawarra Mercury. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  64. ^ "Foxground and Berry bypass". Roads and Maritime Services NSW. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  65. ^ "Berry to Bomaderry Upgrade". Transport for NSW - Roads & Maritime. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  66. ^ "South Nowra Upgrade". Roads & Maritime Services. Government of New South Wales.
  67. ^ "Works begins on Princes Highway duplication". GWN 7.
  68. ^ "It's official – highway is open". South Coast Register. 31 March 2014. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  69. ^ "Princes Highway safety upgrade now complete". Anthony Albanese MP.
  70. ^ "Conjola Mountain Realignment" (PDF). BMD Constructions.
  71. ^ "Burrill Lake Bridge". Roads & Maritime Services. Government of New South Wales. 3 July 2018. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
  72. ^ "Termeil Creek upgrade". Roads & Maritime Services. Government of New South Wales. 23 January 2017. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
  73. ^ "Princes Highway Upgrade:Victoria Creek". Seymour White Constructions. 30 July 2014. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  74. ^ . GHD. Archived from the original on 7 January 2015.
  75. ^ "Bega Bypass". Mikon. 2014. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  76. ^ "New Pambula River bridge set for construction". ABC News. Australia. 23 June 2006. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  77. ^ a b National Roads Act 1974 (Cth)
  78. ^ (PDF). Roads & Maritime Services. Government of New South Wales. 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 March 2016. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  79. ^ "2–6 City Road, Chippendale NSW 2008 to President Avenue, Kogarah NSW 2217". Google Maps. 2016. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  80. ^ "President Avenue, Kogarah NSW 2217 to Princes Highway & A1 & M1 & Princes Motorway, New South Wales". Google Maps. 2016. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  81. ^ "Princes Motorway & Princes Highway & M1 & A1, New South Wales to Princes Motorway & Princes Highway & M1 & Lookout Walking Track, Maddens Plains NSW 2508". Google Maps. 2016. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  82. ^ "136 Princes Highway, Thirroul NSW 2515 to 310 Princes Highway, Bulli NSW 2516". Google Maps. 2016. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  83. ^ "Princes Highway, Bulli NSW 2516 to National Highway 1, Oak Flats NSW 2529". Google Maps. 2021. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  84. ^ "M1, Helensburgh NSW 2508 to Croome NSW 2527". Google Maps. 2021. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  85. ^ "M1, Croome NSW 2527 to Border Firetrail, New South Wales". Google Maps. 2021. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  86. ^ , New South Wales Land and Property Information, archived from the original on 25 May 2008, retrieved 8 September 2011
  87. ^ Schedule of Classified Roads and State & Regional Roads (PDF), Roads and Traffic Authority of New South Wales, 31 January 2011, retrieved 8 September 2011
  88. ^ "Roads and Traffic Authority" (PDF), Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales, Government of New South Wales, vol. 189, p. 9185, 25 October 2002, retrieved 8 September 2011

External links edit

  • RTA Webcam Suburban Sydney
  • VicRoads (Victorian road departmen)

princes, highway, this, article, about, road, classified, highway, south, wales, victoria, south, australia, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, contains, bulleted, list, table, intersections, which, should, presented, properly, formatted, junction, ta. This article is about the road classified as a highway in New South Wales Victoria and South Australia For other uses see Princes Highway disambiguation This article contains a bulleted list or table of intersections which should be presented in a properly formatted junction table Please consult this guideline for information on how to create one Please improve this article if you can December 2021 Princes Highway is a major road in Australia extending from Sydney via Melbourne to Adelaide through the states of New South Wales Victoria and South Australia It has a length of 1 941 kilometres 1 206 mi along Highway 1 or 1 898 kilometres 1 179 mi via the former alignments of the highway citation needed although these routes are slower and connections to the bypassed sections of the original route are poor in many cases Princes HighwayNew South Wales South AustraliaGeneral informationTypeHighwayLength1 898 km 1 179 mi Opened10 August 1920 103 years ago 1920 08 10 1 GazettedJuly 1925 VIC 2 August 1928 NSW as Main Road 1 3 Route number s See Route allocationFormerroute numberSee Former routesMajor junctionsEast endGreat Western HighwayUltimo Sydney East Motorway Illawarra Highway Kings Highway Snowy Mountains Highway Monaro Highway Great Alpine Road South Gippsland Highway Strzelecki Highway South Gippsland Freeway EastLink CityLink Western Ring Road Midland Highway Hamilton Highway Great Ocean Road Hopkins Highway Henty Highway Glenelg Highway Riddoch Highway Southern Ports Highway Dukes HighwayWest endGlen Osmond RoadGlen Osmond AdelaideLocation s Major settlementsWollongong Nowra Ulladulla Batemans Bay Eden Orbost Sale Traralgon Melbourne Geelong Warrnambool Mount Gambier Kingston SE Tailem Bend Murray Bridge CrafersHighway systemHighways in Australia National Highway Freeways in Australia Highways in New South Wales Highways in Victoria Highways in South AustraliaThe highway follows the coastline for most of its length and thus takes quite an indirect and lengthy route For example it is 1 040 kilometres 650 mi from Sydney to Melbourne on Highway 1 as opposed to 870 kilometres 540 mi on the more direct Hume Highway National Highway 31 and 915 kilometres 569 mi from Melbourne to Adelaide compared to 730 kilometres 450 mi on the Western and Dukes Highways National Highway 8 Because of the rural nature and lower traffic volumes over much of its length Princes Highway is a more scenic and leisurely route than the main highways between these major cities Contents 1 Route 1 1 New South Wales 1 2 Victoria 1 3 South Australia 2 History 2 1 Timeline of significant upgrades and bypasses 2 1 1 Projects 2 2 Route allocation 2 2 1 Former routes 3 Major intersections 3 1 New South Wales 3 1 1 Sydney City Road 3 2 Victoria 3 2 1 East 3 2 2 Melbourne Narre Warren Southbank 3 2 3 Melbourne Southbank Laverton North 3 2 4 West 3 3 South Australia 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksRoute editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Princes Highway news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 template removal help New South Wales edit nbsp Princes Highway at Moruya nbsp Princes Highway at Eden Princes Highway starts at the junction of Broadway Great Western Highway and City Road in the Sydney suburb of Chippendale City Road in fact forms the first section of the highway and becomes King Street Newtown also part of Princes Highway Where King Street ends at Sydney Park Road Princes Highway continues in its own right The highway in this section is constructed as a six lane divided carriageway other than along King Street four lane undivided and along the western edge of the Royal National Park where it is built as four lane dual carriageway The only major engineering structures along its route are the twin Tom Uglys Bridge across Georges River The northbound bridge is of steel truss construction opened in 1929 whilst the southbound bridge is of prestressed concrete girders opened in 1987 It runs through Sydney s southern suburbs the St George area and Sutherland Shire via Kogarah Sutherland and Engadine to the village of Waterfall nbsp Princes Highway at WoononaSouth of Waterfall the highway is paralleled by the 55 kilometre 34 mi Princes Motorway national route M1 to the top of Bulli Pass outside the city of Wollongong which carries the majority of traffic The Princes Highway then enters the northern suburbs of Wollongong and the Illawarra region via the Bulli Pass whilst Mount Ousley Road which is designated as part of national route 1 bypasses Wollongong s northern suburbs to meet the Princes Highway at Fairy Meadow and carries inter city traffic Where Mount Ousley Road enters Wollongong the Princes Motorway branches off Mount Ousley Road and parallels the highway through the suburbs of Wollongong to Yallah The Mount Ousley Road Princes Motorway route is the inter city and main urban arterial through Wollongong s southern suburbs whereas the Princes Highway acts as a local arterial From the interchange with the Princes Motorway at Yallah the Princes Highway continues through the bypassed Albion Park Rail before reaching the southern terminus of the motorway at the Oak Flats interchange From Oak Flats the Princes Highway is dual carriageway mostly of freeway standard with the exception of the Kiama bends at Kiama Heights The highway then travels along the upgraded sections through Gerringong and Foxground before bypassing the town of Berry where the highway follows larger gradients compared to the flat terrain the Illawarra railway line follows immediately to the east Beyond Mullers Lane Berry the highway is a single two lane carriageway to Cambewarra Road Bomaderry Construction is underway for the duplication of the highway from Mullers Lane to Cambewarra Road and is expected to be completed in 2022 4 From Cambewarra Road the highway is four lane divided through Bomaderry and Nowra to near the junction with Warra Warra Road in South Nowra Duplication to dual carriageway standard of a 6 kilometre 4 mi length south from here to Forest Road was scheduled for completion in early 2014 following a three month cessation of work while measures were put in place to protect a hitherto unknown area of habitat of the endangered green and golden bell frog 5 Beyond this section is 4 kilometres 2 5 mi of four lane single carriageway from Forest Road to the junction with Jervis Bay Road From Jervis Bay Road southward the highway is mostly single two lane carriageway along the NSW South Coast passing through Ulladulla Batemans Bay where the 1 kilometre 0 6 mi town centre bypass is built as dual carriageway Moruya Narooma then bypassing Bega and Merimbula and passing through Eden before crossing the border at the Black Allen Line into Victoria 550 kilometres 340 mi from Sydney and 515 kilometres 320 mi from Melbourne A substandard alignment at Victoria Creek 13 kilometres 8 mi south of Narooma was upgraded in 2012 13 as well as the 3 5 kilometre 2 2 mi Bega bypass Realignments with associated new bridges are also proposed at Termeil Creek some 30 kilometres 19 mi south of Ulladulla and Dignams Creek some 20 kilometres 12 mi south of Narooma Current identified future projects are a bypass of Nowra Bomaderry definite route identified only for section south of Shoalhaven River and a bypass of Ulladulla Milton In 2007 the NRMA claimed Princes Highway was a dangerous road 6 with ten fatalities and 729 people injured on the highway between Sydney and the state border in 2006 7 Victoria edit See also Princes Freeway and Old Princes Highway Victoria nbsp Princes Highway is picturesque in some towns such as Bairnsdale Victoria where the median strip has been made a garden In Victoria Princes Highway follows a very long and complex route The route within metropolitan Melbourne carries the original individual names of sections of Princes Highway on signage Each road section has Princes Highway labelled in bold and the individual name in brackets such as Dandenong Road or Geelong Road Apart from the routes Alt National Route 1 C101 and C109 in the outer metropolitan areas such as Berwick and Werribee the M1 Freeway route intersects Monash Freeway CityLink West Gate Freeway Princes Freeway and this carries the much higher volume of traffic including congestion in the peak periods serving as the major most direct and quickest route for Route 1 in Australia In Victoria the length from the South Australian border to the New South Wales border is 955 kilometres 593 mi The highway passes from east to west through Orbost Bairnsdale and Sale in the Gippsland region The highway then passes through the Latrobe Valley bypassing Morwell Warragul and Pakenham to Dandenong and into the south eastern suburbs of Melbourne Most of this section is freeway standard with the main outstanding work being a freeway bypass of Traralgon although the highway through Traralgon has already been built to urban dual carriageway standard As the road passes through Melbourne it first follows the route of Lonsdale Street through Dandenong then Dandenong Road to St Kilda and Queens Road through Albert Park this section of highway is shown in the 1969 Melbourne Transportation Plan as part of the F14 freeway corridor Closer to Melbourne city centre it follows the route of Kings Way and then King Street through central Melbourne It then follows Curzon Street after leaving the central business district to enter North Melbourne and then follows Flemington Road northwest then Racecourse Road Smithfield Road and Ballarat Road It starts again as Geelong Road where Geelong Road branches southwest off Ballarat Road and Ballarat Road leads onto Western Freeway The reason for the confusing dual naming of the highway through Melbourne is that it follows streets and roads which were already named when the highway was named in 1920 Through much of Melbourne and its suburbs the designation of National Route 1 is not along Princes Highway but rather Monash Freeway which intersects the Princes Highway on the eastern outskirts of Melbourne then the southern link of the CityLink tollway and then West Gate Freeway which bypasses central Melbourne This avoids the confusing and congested arrangement of roads that is the Princes Highway in central Melbourne The M1 include an advanced freeway management system for its entire 75 kilometre 47 mi urban length between Narre Warren and Werribee Along with freeway sensors and associated data stations overhead lane use management system LUMS gantries that show speed and lane availability electronic message boards real time drive time signs and arterial road real time Information signs before the on ramps there are the 64 ramp signal and metering sites Hence the majority of the on ramps are traffic light controlled depending on the density and speed of the traffic Heading towards Geelong in a south west direction the West Gate Freeway and Geelong Road join and become the Princes Freeway Which unusually for an Australian inter city freeway carries enough traffic to merit four to three lanes in either direction often still being congested in the morning and afternoon peaks On the northern outskirts of Geelong the highway reverts from freeway to three lane dual carriageway through Geelong and its suburbs with traffic light controlled at grade intersections Through Geelong the highway is often heavily congested With the completion of the freeway standard Geelong Ring Road during 2008 9 the M1 route follows the freeway standard road from Winchelsea to Traralgon without encountering any traffic lights with the exception of Yarragon and Trafalgar which are yet to be bypassed The ring road rejoins the original highway at Waurn Ponds on the western edge of Geelong Within Geelong Princes Highway starts at the junction of Princes Freeway in the northern Geelong suburb of Corio and runs through Geelong s northern and southern suburbs via an inner city western bypass of the Geelong City Centre to the current Highway 1 segment of the Princes Highway at Waurn Ponds in Geelong s southern suburbs The highway is six lane dual carriageway from Corio to Latrobe Terrace continuing as a four lane dual carriageway to Waurn Ponds The 1989 re alignment of Princes Highway along La Trobe Terrace provides a dual carriageway four lane limited access road to replace the original route along Moorabool Street in South Geelong and High Street in Belmont Upon the completion of the final section of the Geelong Ring Road another section of the Princes Highway was superseded in 2013 at Waurn Ponds After Geelong the highway heads in a generally western direction continuing with the M1 designation as a dual carriageway road to Winchelsea opened 2015 West of Winchelsea the road is presently being reconstructed to dual carriageway standard passing through Colac before reaching Camperdown ultimately reaching the port of Warrnambool The section from Geelong to Warrnambool runs inland and so avoids the slower but scenic Great Ocean Road From here Princes Highway passes through Portland before crossing the border into South Australia At this point the highway is 1 530 kilometres 950 mi from Sydney 465 kilometres 289 mi from Melbourne and 510 kilometres 320 mi from Adelaide South Australia edit At Mount Gambier the highway takes a more northward tack as the coast curves to the northwest passing the Coorong National Park After Kingston SE it turns inland north to avoid the lakes at the mouth of the River Murray Shortly before Tailem Bend it is joined by Dukes Highway part of the main route between Melbourne and Adelaide The highway then turns north west and becomes South Eastern Freeway crosses the Murray River bypasses Murray Bridge and continues to Glen Osmond on Adelaide s southeastern outskirts At this point Princes Highway is 6 kilometres 4 mi from Adelaide and 2 055 kilometres 1 277 mi from Sydney It continues north west via Glen Osmond Road to eventually terminate just south of the Adelaide city centre History editThe section of Princes Highway between West Helensburgh and Bulli Tops was the original coastal route between Sydney and Wollongong first used in 1843 citation needed From Bulli Tops this route continued south along today s Mount Ousley Road as far south as Mount Keira Road and then followed Mount Keira Road around the west of Mount Keira This route replaced the inland route from Sydney via Liverpool Campbelltown Appin to Bulli Tops As a named route the highway came into being when pre existing roads were renamed Prince s Highway after the planned visit to Australia by the Prince of Wales later to become king Edward VIII and after abdicating the Duke of Windsor in 1920 The original submissions in January 1920 were in order for the Prince to have the opportunity during his visit to make the trip from Melbourne to Sydney overland along the route Different routes were considered including the inland route via Yass 8 That idea never came to fruition due partly to the limited amount of time and the cost of upgrading the road to a suitable standard for him to undertake the trip The Prince did however give his permission for the naming 1 The highway had opening ceremonies in both New South Wales and Victoria during 1920 The first section of road from Melbourne was opened on 10 August in Warragul 1 The road from Sydney was opened in Bulli on 19 October by the NSW Minister for Local Government Thomas Mutch 9 Within New South Wales the passing of the Main Roads Act of 1924 10 through the Parliament of New South Wales provided for the declaration of Main Roads roads partially funded by the State government through the Main Roads Board later the Department of Main Roads and eventually Transport for NSW Main Road No 1 was declared along Prince s Highway on 8 August 1928 heading south from the City of Sydney through Sutherland Wollongong Nowra Bateman s Bay and Eden to the southern boundary of the state towards Genoa in Victoria for a total of 351 5 miles 3 With the passing of the Main Roads Amendment Act of 1929 11 to provide for additional declarations of State Highways and Trunk Roads this was amended to State Highway 1 on 8 April 1929 Before the adoption of the Prince s Highway name in 1920 the road between Sydney and the border was referred to as the Coast Road 12 Within Victoria approval was given by the Victorian executive in January 1922 to extend the highway west from Melbourne through Geelong Camperdown Warrnambool and Portland to the South Australian border 13 The passing of the Highways and Vehicles Act of 1924 14 through the Parliament of Victoria provided for the declaration of State Highways roads two thirds financed by the State government through the Country Roads Board later VicRoads Prince s Highway was declared a State Highway on 1 July 1925 2 traversing the whole length of the State from its western boundary near Mount Gambier in South Australia through Port Fairy Warrnambool Geelong to Melbourne through Dandenong Warragul Sale Bairnsdale and Orbost to the eastern boundary of the state towards Eden in New South Wales for a total of 540 miles before the adoption of the Prince s Highway name in 1920 the road between Melbourne and Bairnsdale was referred to as Main Gippsland Road between Bairnsdale and the NSW border as Orbost Genoa Road and Genoa Eden Road and between Melbourne and Port Fairy as Melbourne Geelong Road Geelong Warrnambool Road and Warrnambool Port Fairy Road 15 Within South Australia roads from Adelaide to the South Australian border with Victoria were renamed by the State government in February 1922 16 At that time the route from Adelaide was via Aldgate Mylor Macclesfield Strathalbyn Langhorne Creek crossing the Murray River at Wellington then continuing along the present towns of Meningie Kingston SE Robe Beachport Millicent and Gambier Town Mount Gambier 17 By 1928 the route went through Mount Barker and Wistow to Langhorne Creek 18 By 1935 the Princes Highway passed through Nairne and Kanmantoo 19 Murray Bridge and Tailem Bend now known as the Old Princes Highway That road was superseded by the South Eastern Freeway Crafers Murray Bridge in stages 1967 1979 Swanport Bridge 1979 finally extended from Crafers to Glen Osmond 2000 The section between Kingston SE and Millicent has also been replaced by a more direct inland route The coastal route through Robe and Beachport is now route B101 the Southern Ports Highway In 1942 as part of wartime defence measures a road was built from Mount Keira Road to Fairy Meadow This route forms part of Mount Ousley Road citation needed The passing of the Roads Act of 1993 20 through the Parliament of New South Wales updated road classifications and the way they could be declared within New South Wales Under this act Princes Highway today retains its declaration as Highway 1 from the intersection with Broadway in Chippendale in Sydney to the state border with Victoria 21 The passing of the Road Management Act 2004 22 through the Parliament of Victoria granted the responsibility of overall management and development of Victoria s major arterial roads to VicRoads VicRoads re declared the road in 2010 as Princes Highway West Arterial 6500 beginning at the state border with South Australia to Geelong then from Altona North to Parkville 23 and in 2008 as Princes Highway East Arterial 6510 beginning at the Melbourne CBD to Narre Warren then through Yarragon Trafalgar and Morwell the from Morwell to the state border with New South Wales 24 In August 2011 the stretch of the highway in South Australia between Adelaide and Port Augusta commonly referred to as Highway 1 was renamed Port Wakefield Highway between Adelaide and Port Wakefield and Augusta Highway between Port Wakefield and Port Augusta as part of a process to standardise the rural property addressing system across the state 25 Timeline of significant upgrades and bypasses edit Timeline of significant upgrades and bypasses Date Project State Length Value Comments Noteskm mi1940 Laverton deviation VIC 9 7 6 The construction of a deviation 6 miles in length from Kororoit Creek Road Altona to Old Geelong Road Hoppers Crossing was commenced on behalf of the Department of the Interior The work includes the erection of a bridge over the railway near Laverton station the new road opened to traffic some time after 30 June 1940 26 1961 Maltby By pass Road Werribee bypass VIC 10 5 6 5 A 950 000 Opened on 16 June 1961 by the Hon Sir Thomas Maltby ED MP Minister of Public Works the route was named the Maltby By pass Road by then Premier of Victoria Henry Bolte MP It was Victoria s first controlled access highway or freeway as such roads are now generally known in Victoria It is a 4 lane divided highway 6 5 miles in route length with no access from adjoining property or cross roads over its entire length 27 1959 1962 Club Terrace Loop VIC 16 50 10 25 Beginning in 1959 construction of the Club Terrace Loop deviation was completed in 1962 providing a completely new road diverting traffic from a 15 mile length of narrow sub standard road passing through the township of Club Terrace west of Cann River 28 29 1959 1963 North South Motorway Princes Motorway NSW From North Wollongong to West Wollongong the Motorway was opened in stages replacing Princes Highway as main north south route citation needed 1964 Connector road NSW The road from Mount Ousley Road to the North South Motorway at Gwynneville was opened to traffic citation needed 1967 Princes Highway East near Mount Drummer VIC 8 9 5 5 A ceremony sponsored by Orbost Shire Council at Genoa was held on 17 January 1967 30 1967 South Eastern Freeway Stage 1 SA Bypassed Crafers and Stirling citation needed 1969 Moe bypass VIC 6 1 3 8 A dual lane 24 feet 7 3 m wide single carriageway has been constructed with earthworks and grade separated structures to accommodate future duplicate pavements 31 1972 Haunted Hills section VIC 4 2 2 6 Second carriageway opened between Gunn s Gully and Hernes Oak 32 1973 Road duplication VIC 6 4 4 Dual carriageway from East Warrnambool to Allansford 33 1974 Rail crossing elimination VIC 1 1 0 7 3 8 million Reconstruction of bridges over railway and grade separation of connecting roads Gordon Street Footscray 33 34 1975 NSW Princes Highway from Waterfall to Bulli Tops superseded by the opening of Southern Freeway citation needed 1976 Snowy River Bridge Princes Freeway Orbost VIC 8 4 5 2 A 2 4 million Opened by the Hon J A Rafferty Minister for Transport 25 November 1976 The bridge was the first of four bridges to be built as part of the freeway bypass of Orbost It s interesting to note the reference to a freeway given that the entire bypass is a single two lane carriageway and is not controlled access The CRB s own definition of a freeway can be found in most of their annual reports dating back to the 1960s A freeway is a road having dual carriageways with no direct access from adjoining properties and side roads All crossings of a freeway are by means of overpass or underpass bridges and traffic enters or leaves the freeway carriageways by means of carefully designed ramps 35 36 1979 Swanport Bridge SA Completed the South Eastern Freeway to bypass Murray Bridge citation needed 1981 Drouin bypass VIC 7 4 3 A 12 million From Robin Hood to the existing highway east of Drouin with two lanes each direction plus emergency stopping lanes Opened 12 February 1981 by the Hon J C M Balfour MP 37 1983 Berwick bypass VIC 7 3 4 5 A 19 6 million Opened on 14 December 1983 by the Federal Minister for Transport the Hon Peter Morris MP and the Victorian Assistant Minister of Transport the Hon Jack Simpson MP This road bypass was from the Princes Highway near Hessle Road to Pink Hill Beaconsfield 38 1985 Warragul bypass VIC 9 5 6 A 23 million From the end of the Drouin Bypass to Nilma opened on 12 December 1985 by the Federal Minister for Transport the Hon Peter Morris MP and the Victorian Minister of Transport the Hon Tom Roper MP 39 1987 Road duplication VIC 9 5 6 A 16 million Nar Nar Goon to Garfield duplication opened 10 April 1987 40 1989 Road duplication VIC Garfield to Bunyip River duplication completed in June 1989 41 1992 Morwell bypass VIC Bypass opened to traffic in April 1992 42 1994 Longwarry section duplication VIC 7 8 4 8 A 25 million Duplication completed between Bunyip River and Robin Hood in January 1994 43 1995 Road duplication VIC Duplicated section between Trafalgar East to Moe opened in August 1995 44 1997 Road duplication VIC 7 4 3 Yarragon to Trafalgar duplication opened to traffic on 2 May 1997 completing a dual carriageway highway from Melbourne to Traralgon 45 2000 Heysen Tunnels SA The tunnel replaced Mount Barker Road through Eagle On The Hill extending the Adelaide end of South Eastern Freeway from Crafers to Glen Osmond citation needed 2002 Oak Flats Interchange NSW The project was opened on 29 October 2001 The interchange was designed to significantly improve traffic flow around the Albion Park Oak Flats section of the Princes Highway by removing a railway level crossing and nearby traffic signals The interchange also connects with Shellharbour City Council s East West Link Road 46 2002 Geelong Road upgrade VIC Upgrades completed from the West Gate Bridge to Lara The Hoppers Crossing to Corio section was widened from two lanes to three in each direction improvements to interchanges and flood management were made and central wire rope barriers were installed The speed limit between Werribee and Corio was decreased from 110 km h to 100 km h 47 2005 Kiama bypass NSW A 179 million Opened to traffic on 28 November 2005 The North Kiama Bypass linked the Kiama Bypass in the south and the Princes Highway near Dunmore in the north 48 2007 Pakenham bypass VIC 20 12 A 242 million Opened to traffic in December 2007 funded jointly by the state and federal governments 49 2008 Geelong Ring Road VIC Corio to Hamilton Highway Fyansford opened 14 December 2008 50 2009 Geelong Ring Road VIC A 380 million Hamilton Highway Fyansford to Waurn Ponds opened 14 June 2009 six months ahead of schedule The project from Corio to Waurn Ponds was funded jointly by the state and federal governments 50 2009 Road duplication NSW A 108 million Oak Flats to Dunmore dual carriageways opened to traffic in October 2009 completing a four lane route between Sydney and south of Kiama 51 2013 Geelong Ring Road VIC Anglesea Road to Princes Highway opened to traffic in February 2013 52 2013 Road duplication VIC 4 2 5 Wurruk to Sale duplication opened June 2013 52 2015 Road duplication VIC 30 19 From Waurn Ponds to Winchelsea 53 2019 2021 Albion Park Rail Bypass NSW 9 8 6 1 A 630 million The northbound lanes of the Albion Park Rail Bypass opened on 7 August 2021 The southbound lanes of the Albion Park Rail Bypass opened on 9 October 2021 completing the missing link in the high standard road between Heathcote and Bomaderry 54 Projects edit List of projects on the Princes Highway in New South Wales Project Length Construction Value Status Noteskm mi Start CompleteBulli Pass upgrade 1 1 0 68 In progress 55 56 Albion Park Rail bypass 9 8 6 1 November 2018 October 2021 630 million Complete 54 55 Oak Flats to Dunmore upgrade June 2007 October 2009 108 million Complete 55 57 North Kiama bypass 7 6 4 7 November 2003 October 2005 141 million Complete 55 58 Kiama On and Off Ramps Northbound and Southbound 2008 2009 8 million Complete 55 Gerringong upgrade 7 5 4 7 July 2012 August 2015 340 million Complete 55 59 60 Foxground and Berry bypass 11 6 7 2 January 2015 June 2017 580 million Complete 55 61 62 63 64 Berry to Bomaderry upgrade 11 5 7 1 September 2018 2022 estimated 450 million In progress 55 65 Nowra Bridge study southbound In planning 55 South Nowra upgrade Kingorne Street to Forest Road 6 3 3 9 November 2011 March 2014 62 million Complete 55 66 67 68 Forest Road to Jervis Bay Road 23 5 14 6 December 2008 23 5 million Complete 55 69 Conjola Mountain realignment 2 3 1 4 September 2008 April 2010 58 million Complete 55 70 Burrill Lake Bridge replacement Early 2018 58 million Complete 55 71 Termeil Creek realignment 1 6 0 99 February 2015 Mid 2016 21 million Complete 55 60 72 Nangudga Bridge replacement December 2011 3 7 million Complete 55 Victoria Creek upgrade 3 2 2 0 June 2011 March 2013 35 million Complete 55 73 Dignams Creek upgrade 2 0 1 2 Early 2017 April 2019 45 million Complete 55 Bega bypass 3 6 2 2 June 2012 December 2013 55 million Complete 55 74 75 Pambula River Bridge replacement 3 5 2 2 August 2006 March 2008 17 million Complete 55 76 Route allocation edit Princes Highway was signed National Route 1 across its entire length in 1955 The Whitlam government introduced the federal National Roads Act 1974 77 where roads declared as a National Highway were still the responsibility of the states for road construction and maintenance but were fully compensated by the Federal government for money spent on approved projects 77 S7 As an important interstate link between the capitals of South Australia and Victoria the parts of Princes Highway not already replaced by South Eastern Freeway between Adelaide and Tailem Bend were declared a National Highway in 1974 With all three states conversion to their newer alphanumeric systems between the late 1990s to the early 2010s its former route number for the most part was updated to A1 for the highway within Victoria in 1997 South Australia in 1998 and eventually the New South Wales section in 2013 78 but with many exceptions see below Due to its history of bypasses many sections of Princes Highway today have different route allocations These allocations from its northern terminus in Sydney to its western terminus in Adelaide are Route allocations on the Princes Highway Routeallocation Road name s Start point End point Distance Cumulativedistance Noteskm mi km mi nbsp A36 City RoadKing StreetPrinces Highway Broadway Junction with President Avenue Kogarah 11 3 7 0 11 3 7 0 79 nbsp A1 Princes Highway Junction with President Avenue Kogarah South of Waterfall with exit as the Princes Highway to Helensburgh 27 8 17 3 39 1 24 3 80 undesignated Princes Highway superseded route South of Waterfall Maddens Plains 20 9 13 0 60 0 37 3 81 nbsp B65 Princes Highway superseded route Junction with Lawrence Hargrave Drive Thirroul Junction with Memorial Drive Bulli 2 9 1 8 62 9 39 1 82 undesignated Princes Highway superseded route Junction with Memorial Drive Bulli Oak Flats Interchange 34 5 21 4 97 4 60 5 83 nbsp M1 Princes Motorway South of Waterfall Oak Flats Interchange 62 3 38 7 101 4 63 0 84 nbsp A1 Princes Highway Oak Flats Interchange Black Allan LineNSW Victorian border 415 258 516 4 320 9 85 nbsp A1 Princes Highway Victorian NSW border Traralgon nbsp M1 Princes Freeway Traralgon Narre Warren nbsp C101 Princes Highway superseded route Pakenham Nar Nar Goon Narre Warrenwith brief old freeway link highway at Beaconsfield nbsp Alternate National Route 1 Princes Highway Narre Warren Southbank at West Gate Freeway east terminus nbsp Metro Route 60 Kings WayKing Street Southbank West Melbourne Victoria Street nbsp Metro Route 60 Curzon StreetHarker Street West Melbourne Parkville near North Melbourne nbsp Metro Route 60 Flemington Road Parkville near North Melbourne Parkville near CityLink west nbsp Metro Route 83 Geelong Road Princes Highway Parkville Laverton North nbsp M1 Princes Freeway Maltby Bypass Geelong Ring Road Laverton North Geelong Mount Moriac nbsp C109 Princes Highway superseded route Werribee Werribee near Point Cook and Hoppers Crossing near Old Geelong Road Werribee near Cocoroc nbsp A10 Princes Highway superseded route Geelong Latrobe TerraceSettlement RoadColac Road Corio near Avalon Waurn Ponds near Town centre former West alignment now Waurn Ponds Drive but closed at freeway far west terminus nbsp A1 Princes Highway Geelong Victorian South Australian border nbsp A1 Princes Highway South Australian Victorian border Mount Gambier nbsp B1 Princes Highway Mount Gambier Tailem Bend nbsp B101 former alt route Southern Ports Highway Millicent Kingston SE nbsp A1 Princes Highway Tailem Bend Murray Bridge nbsp M1 South Eastern Freeway Princes Highway Murray Bridge Glen Osmond nbsp B55 borrowed White Hill Murray Bridge East undesignated Murray Bridge East Long Flat Adelaide Road Bridge Street Old Princes Highway Karoonda Highway Old Princes Highway Murray Bridge Long Flat White Hillundesignated Old Princes Highway Nairne Kanmantoo Callington north Monarto White Hill LittlehamptonMount Barker The gap between the two stages of Princes Freeway are taken up by either a series of unrelatedly named motorways namely Monash Freeway or largely by Princes Highway Former routes edit Within New South Wales Princes Highway formerly entered Wollongong as State Route 60 down the Bulli Pass and ran a largely separate route from Bulli and Thirroul through to the southern suburbs from the parallel Princes Motorway the latter of which today is designated part of route M1 86 The gazetted route of Princes Highway today differs from the route of State Route 60 and from that shown on road signs 87 88 The gazetted route was designated State Route 60 now part of route B65 Memorial Drive for its length but deviated from the road that is signposted as Princes Highway between Bellambi and North Wollongong Major intersections editNew South Wales edit Sydney City Road edit Victoria edit East edit LGALocationkmmiDestinationsNotes nbsp Princes Highway A1 SydneyNew South Wales Victoria state border nbsp Mallacoota Genoa Road nbsp Monaro Highway B23 Canberra nbsp Combienbar Road nbsp Cabbage Tree Conran Road nbsp Lochiel Street nbsp Bruthen Nowa Nowa Road nbsp Metung Road nbsp Swan Reach Road nbsp Great Alpine Road nbsp Paynesville Road nbsp Service Street nbsp Bairnsdale Dargo Road nbsp Bengworden Road nbsp Lindenow South Road nbsp Stratford Bengworden Road nbsp Briagolong Road nbsp Stratford Maffra Road nbsp Bengworden Road nbsp Maffra Sale Road nbsp Raglan Street nbsp South Gippsland Highway nbsp Sale Heyfield Road nbsp Maffra Rosedale Road nbsp Rosedale Heyfield Road nbsp Lyons Street nbsp Princes Freeway M1 MelbourneMelbourne Narre Warren Southbank edit LGALocationkmmiDestinationsNotesCaseyNarre Warren Berwick boundary00 0 nbsp Princes Highway C101 east Berwick nbsp Princes Freeway M1 southeast Warragul nbsp Monash Freeway M1 northwest CityDiamond interchangeNarre Warren1 20 75 nbsp Narre Warren North Road C404 north Belgrave nbsp Narre Warren Cranbourne Road C404 south CranbourneHallam4 93 0Hallam South Road south Hallam nbsp Belgrave Hallam Road B675 north Endeavour HillsCasey Greater Dandenong boundaryDandenong South Hallam Eumemmerring tripoint6 74 2 nbsp South Gippsland Freeway M420 City HastingsDiamond interchangeGreater DandenongDandenong Dandenong South boundary95 6South Gippsland Highway Phillip IslandDandenong9 86 1 nbsp Frankston Dandenong Road Metro Route 9 Frankston10 76 6 nbsp Foster Street Metro Route 9 east Rowville nbsp Foster Street Metro Route 10 west Mentone13 68 5To nbsp Heatherton Road Metro Route 14 Noble Park Endeavour HillsDandenong North Dandenong Noble Park Noble Park North quadripoint13 88 6 nbsp EastLink M3 Ringwood FrankstonDiamond interchangeMonash Greater Dandenong boundaryMulgrave Springvale boundary18 911 7 nbsp Police Road Metro Route 16 east Mulgrave nbsp Centre Road Metro Route 16 west Brighton EastSpringvale Junction1912 nbsp Springvale Road Metro Route 40 Springvale Glen WaverleyClayton Springvale boundary20 412 7 nbsp Westall Road Metro Route 49 Springvale SouthMonashClayton20 913 0 nbsp Blackburn Road Metro Route 13 Blackburn22 213 8 nbsp Wellington Road Metro Route 18 east Rowville nbsp North Road Metro Route 18 west OakleighClayton Oakleigh East boundary nbsp Clayton Road Metro Route 23 Clayton BurwoodOakleigh Oakleigh East Huntingdale tripoint nbsp Huntingdale Road Metro Route 47 HuntingdaleOakleigh Oakleigh East boundary nbsp Ferntree Gully Road Metro Route 22 Ferntree GullyConcurrency with Metro Route 22Monash Stonnington boundaryOakleigh Malvern East Hughesdale tripoint nbsp Warrigal Road Metro Route 15 Glen Eira Stonnington boundaryCarnegie Malvern East Murrumbeena tripoint nbsp Murrumbeena Road Metro Route 22 south Belgrave RoadCaulfield East Malvern East Carnegie tripoint nbsp Grange Road Metro Route 17 Concurrency with Metro Route 17Caulfield East Malvern East boundary nbsp Burke Road Metro Route 17 Caulfield North Malvern boundary nbsp Glenferrie Road Metro Route 19 north HawthornConcurrency with Metro Route 19 nbsp Hawthorn Road Metro Route 19 south CaulfieldPort Phillip Stonnington boundarySt Kilda East Prahran Windsor tripoint nbsp Hotham Street Metro Route 25 south nbsp Williams Road Metro Route 25 north St Kilda Windsor boundaryChapel Street nbsp St Kilda Road Metro Route 3 nbsp Punt Road Metro Route 29 Port PhillipMelbourne CBD Albert Park boundary nbsp Lorne Street Metro Route 24 Melbourne CBD nbsp Toorak Road Metro Route 26 east ToorakConcurrency with Metro Route 26Melbourne CBD South Melbourne boundary nbsp Albert Road Metro Route 26 west Port Phillip Melbourne boundarySouthbank nbsp West Gate Freeway M1 Geelong nbsp CityLink M1 Dandenong nbsp Kings Way Metro Route 60 CityMelbourne Southbank Laverton North edit LGALocationkmmiDestinationsNotes nbsp Kings Way Alt National Route 1 Dandenong nbsp CityLink M1 east DandenongMoray StreetWhiteman Street nbsp Flinders Street Metro Route 30 Flinders LaneCollins StreetLittle Collins StreetBourke StreetLittle Bourke StreetLonsdale StreetLittle Lonsdale StreetLa Trobe Street nbsp nbsp Dudley Street Metro Routes 32 55 Hawke StreetVictoria StreetQueensberry StreetArden Street nbsp Flemington Road Metro Route 60 Abbotsford Street nbsp Elliott Avenue Metro Route 83 Parkville nbsp Flemington Road Metro Route 60 FlemingtonBoundary Road Travancore North Melbourne nbsp CityLink M2 Docklands Port MelbourneStubbs Street KensingtonRacecourse Road Ascot Vale nbsp Epsom Road Metro Route 35 Kensington Ascot Vale nbsp Moore Street Metro Route 35 nbsp Ballarat Road Metro Route 8 Droop StreetBarkly Street nbsp Gordon Street Metro Route 37 nbsp Buckley Street Metro Route 32 nbsp Geelong Street Metro Route 37 nbsp Somerville Road Metro Route 50 east nbsp Millers Road Metro Route 41 south Francis Street east nbsp nbsp McDonald Road Metro Routes 39 41 nbsp Grieve Parade Metro Route 39 Little Boundary Road nbsp Princes Freeway M1 Geelong1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Route transition West edit LGALocationkmmiDestinationsNotes nbsp Geelong Ring Road M1 Melbourne nbsp Cape Otway Road C135 south nbsp Devon Road C111 north nbsp Inverleigh Winchelsea Road C145 nbsp Winchelsea Deans Marsh Road C151 nbsp Birregurra Road C119 nbsp Warncoort Birregurra Road C152 nbsp Colac Ballarat Road C146 nbsp Queen Street C154 nbsp Corangamite Street C155 nbsp Corangamite Lake Road C147 nbsp Timboon Colac Road C163 nbsp Cobden Stonyford Road C149 nbsp Camperdown Cobden Road C164 nbsp nbsp Camperdown Lismore Road C164 C165 nbsp Darlington Camperdown Road C173 nbsp Mackinnons Bridge Road C158 nbsp Terang Mortlake Road C156 nbsp Cobden Terang Road C156 nbsp Ayresford Road C168 nbsp Great Ocean Road B100 nbsp Hopkins Highway B120 nbsp Caramut Road C174 nbsp Southern Cross Road C177 nbsp Koroit Port Fairy Road C179 nbsp Penshurst Port Fairy Road C178 nbsp Hamilton Port Fairy Road C184 nbsp Tyrendarra Ettrick Road C191 nbsp Henty Highway A200 south Portland nbsp Woolsthorpe Heywood Road C176 nbsp Henty Highway A200 north nbsp Portland Casterton Road C195 nbsp Dartmoor Hamilton Road C187 South Australia Victoria state border nbsp Princes Highway A1 AdelaideSouth Australia editSee also edit nbsp Australian Roads portal nbsp New South Wales portal nbsp Australia portal nbsp South Australia portal Highway 1 Australia Highway 1 South Australia Highways in Australia Highways in Victoria List of highways in New South Wales List of highways in South Australia Princes FreewayReferences edit a b c PRINCE S HIGHWAY The Argus Melbourne National Library of Australia 11 August 1920 p 9 Retrieved 8 September 2011 a b Country Roads Board Victoria Twelfth Annual Report for the year ended 30 June 1925 Country Roads Board of Victoria Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 31 December 1925 p 3 a b Main Roads Act 1924 1927 Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales No 110 National Library of Australia 17 August 1928 pp 3814 20 Archived from the original on 3 August 2022 Retrieved 1 August 2022 Transport for NSW N S W Berry to Bomaderry Princes Highway upgrade Transport for NSW Retrieved 10 October 2021 Work to restart at South Nowra PDF Roads amp Maritime Services Press release 22 March 2012 Retrieved 18 May 2012 Work was suspended in November 2011 and since then Roads amp Maritime Services has been working to ensure the frogs are protected while the work is carried out NSW Roads Minister Duncan Gay said Princes Highway ignored by NSW govt NRMA ABC News Australia 22 June 2007 Retrieved 5 February 2008 NRMA managing director Alan Evans says the highway is one of the most dangerous in the state and he is disappointed that it has been ignored Road traffic crashes in New South Wales Statistical Statement for the year ended 31 December 2006 PDF Crash statistics New South Wales Road Traffic Authority 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 5 August 2008 Retrieved 5 February 2008 see Table 25 pages 58 59 MELBOURNE SYDNEY ROAD The Argus Melbourne National Library of Australia 24 January 1920 p 18 Retrieved 8 September 2011 PRINCE S HIGHWAY The Sydney Morning Herald National Library of Australia 20 October 1920 p 12 Retrieved 8 September 2011 State of New South Wales An Act to provide for the better construction maintenance and financing of main roads to provide for developmental roads to constitute a Main Roads Board Archived 11 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine 10 November 1924 State of New South Wales An Act to amend the Main Roads Act 1924 1927 to confer certain further powers upon the Main Roads Board to amend the Local Government Act 1919 and certain other Acts to validate certain payments and other matters and for purposes connected therewith Archived 12 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine 8 April 1929 Main Roads Board of New South Wales Annual Report Volume 1 number 1 PDF Main Roads Board of New South Wales Vol 1 no 1 Sydney OpenGov NSW September 1929 pp 20 2 PRINCE S HIGHWAY The Argus Melbourne National Library of Australia 25 January 1922 p 12 Retrieved 8 September 2011 State of Victoria An Act to make further provision with respect to Highways and Country Roads Motor Cars and Traction Engines and for other purposes 30 December 1924 Country Roads Board Victoria Second Annual Report Country Roads Board of Victoria Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 1 November 1915 pp 15 7 19 21 28 30 2 THE PRINCE S HIGHWAY The Register Adelaide National Library of Australia 10 February 1922 p 6 Retrieved 8 September 2011 PRINCE S HIGHWAY The News Adelaide National Library of Australia 18 October 1924 p 9 Edition Sporting Edition Retrieved 13 February 2015 SOUTH EASTERN DISTRICT COUNCILS ASSOCIATION The Narracoorte Herald SA National Library of Australia 28 August 1928 p 4 Retrieved 13 February 2015 519 Men Engaged On Road Work The Advertiser Adelaide National Library of Australia 20 June 1935 p 10 Retrieved 13 February 2015 State of New South Wales An Act to make provision with respect to the roads of New South Wales to repeal the State Roads Act 1986 the Crown and Other Roads Act 1990 and certain other enactments and for other purposes Archived 11 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine 10 November 1924 Transport for NSW August 2022 Schedule of Classified Roads and Unclassified Regional Roads PDF Government of New South Wales Retrieved 1 August 2022 State Government of Victoria Road Management Act 2004 PDF Government of Victoria Archived PDF from the original on 18 October 2021 Retrieved 19 October 2021 VicRoads VicRoads Register of Public Roads Part A 2015 PDF Government of Victoria pp 976 8 Archived from the original on 1 May 2020 Retrieved 19 October 2021 VicRoads VicRoads Register of Public Roads Part A 2015 PDF Government of Victoria pp 979 83 Archived from the original on 1 May 2020 Retrieved 19 October 2021 Highways renamed in SA Logistics Trucking and Transport News Prime Mover Magazine Retrieved 17 November 2012 Country Roads Board Victoria Twenty Seventh Annual Report for the year ended 30 June 1940 Country Roads Board of Victoria Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 18 November 1940 p 6 Country Roads Board Victoria Forty eighth annual report for the year ended 30th June 1961 Melbourne Victoria Government Printer 1961 p 20 Country Roads Board Victoria Forty Sixth Annual Report for the year ended 30 June 1959 Country Roads Board of Victoria Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 27 November 1959 p 21 Country Roads Board Victoria Fifty Fourth Annual Report for the year ended 30 June 1967 Country Roads Board of Victoria Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 12 January 1968 p 14 Country Roads Board Victoria Fifty Fourth Annual Report for the year ended 30th June 1967 Burwood Victoria Brown Prior Anderson 1968 p 13 Country Roads Board Victoria Fifty Sixth Annual Report for the year ended 30th June 1969 Burwood Victoria Brown Prior Anderson 1970 p 5 10 Country Roads Board Victoria Fifty Ninth Report for the year ended 30th June 1972 Burwood Victoria Brown Prior Anderson 1972 p 9 a b Country Roads Board Victoria Sixtieth Annual Report for the year ended 30 June 1973 Country Roads Board of Victoria Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 1 November 1973 pp 7 24 Country Roads Board Victoria Sixty First Annual Report for the year ended 30 June 1974 Country Roads Board of Victoria Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 1 November 1974 p 24 Country Roads Board Victoria Sixty Fourth Annual Report for the year ended 30th June 1977 Burwood Victoria Brown Prior Anderson 1977 p 7 Country Roads Board Victoria 69th Annual Report 1981 1982 Kew Victoria Country Roads Board Victoria 1982 p 24 Country Roads Board Victoria 68th Annual Report 1980 1981 Kew Victoria Country Roads Board Victoria 1981 p 10 Road Construction Authority Victoria 1st Annual Report 1983 84 Kew Victoria Road Construction Authority Victoria 1984 p 10 Road Construction Authority of Victoria Annual Report for the year ended 30 June 1986 Road Construction Authority of Victoria Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 24 November 1986 p 7 Road Construction Authority Victoria Annual Report 1986 87 Kew Victoria Road Construction Authority Victoria 1987 p 64 Road Construction Authority Victoria Annual Report 1988 1989 Kew Victoria Road Construction Authority Victoria 1989 p 45 VicRoads VicRoads Annual Report 1992 93 Kew Victoria VicRoads 1993 p 43 VicRoads VicRoads Annual Report 1993 94 Kew Victoria VicRoads 1994 p 15 VicRoads VicRoads Annual Report 1995 96 Kew Victoria VicRoads 1996 p 15 VicRoads VicRoads Annual Report 1996 97 Kew Victoria VicRoads 1997 p 16 Roads and Traffic Authority NSW Annual report 2002 Sydney New South Wales RTA 2002 p 38 Viseth Uch 2007 M1 Princes Freeway Highway West ONLINE Available at http mrv ozroads com au Accessed 21 February 2018 Roads and Traffic Authority NSW Annual report 2006 Sydney New South Wales RTA 2006 p 26 VicRoads VicRoads Annual Report 2007 08 Kew Victoria VicRoads 2008 p 35 a b VicRoads VicRoads Annual Report 2008 09 Kew Victoria VicRoads 2009 p 43 Roads and Traffic Authority NSW Annual report 2009 10 Sydney New South Wales RTA 2010 p 26 a b VicRoads Annual Report 2012 13 Kew Victoria VicRoads 2013 p 20 VicRoads Annual Report 2014 15 VicRoads Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 3 September 2015 p 13 a b Transport for NSW N S W Albion Park Rail bypass Princes Highway upgrade Transport for NSW Retrieved 10 October 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Princes Highway upgrades Roads amp Maritime Services Government of New South Wales February 2014 Retrieved 11 October 2016 Bulli Pass NSW Roads and Maritime Services 14 March 2017 Retrieved 26 February 2019 Oak Flats to Dunmore Realignment Cordell Construction Projects North Kiama By pass Princes Highway Priority Projects Princes Highway Taskforce 27 August 2004 Retrieved 11 October 2016 Gerringong upgrade PDF Roads amp Maritime Services Government of New South Wales June 2014 Retrieved 11 October 2016 a b A1 Princes Highway M1 Princes Motorway upgrades PDF Roads amp Maritime Services Government of New South Wales May 2016 Retrieved 11 October 2016 Foxground and Berry bypass Transport for NSW Roads amp Maritime Retrieved 1 August 2020 Project Update PDF Roads amp Maritime Services Government of New South Wales Arnold Alex 3 November 2014 Berry bypass on way as homes demolished Illawarra Mercury Retrieved 11 October 2016 Foxground and Berry bypass Roads and Maritime Services NSW Retrieved 19 February 2019 Berry to Bomaderry Upgrade Transport for NSW Roads amp Maritime Retrieved 1 August 2020 South Nowra Upgrade Roads amp Maritime Services Government of New South Wales Works begins on Princes Highway duplication GWN 7 It s official highway is open South Coast Register 31 March 2014 Retrieved 11 October 2016 Princes Highway safety upgrade now complete Anthony Albanese MP Conjola Mountain Realignment PDF BMD Constructions Burrill Lake Bridge Roads amp Maritime Services Government of New South Wales 3 July 2018 Retrieved 25 February 2019 Termeil Creek upgrade Roads amp Maritime Services Government of New South Wales 23 January 2017 Retrieved 25 February 2019 Princes Highway Upgrade Victoria Creek Seymour White Constructions 30 July 2014 Retrieved 11 October 2016 Bega Bypass GHD Archived from the original on 7 January 2015 Bega Bypass Mikon 2014 Retrieved 11 October 2016 New Pambula River bridge set for construction ABC News Australia 23 June 2006 Retrieved 11 October 2016 a b National Roads Act 1974 Cth Road number and name changes in NSW PDF Roads amp Maritime Services Government of New South Wales 2012 Archived from the original PDF on 25 March 2016 Retrieved 7 November 2016 2 6 City Road Chippendale NSW 2008 to President Avenue Kogarah NSW 2217 Google Maps 2016 Retrieved 11 October 2016 President Avenue Kogarah NSW 2217 to Princes Highway amp A1 amp M1 amp Princes Motorway New South Wales Google Maps 2016 Retrieved 11 October 2016 Princes Motorway amp Princes Highway amp M1 amp A1 New South Wales to Princes Motorway amp Princes Highway amp M1 amp Lookout Walking Track Maddens Plains NSW 2508 Google Maps 2016 Retrieved 11 October 2016 136 Princes Highway Thirroul NSW 2515 to 310 Princes Highway Bulli NSW 2516 Google Maps 2016 Retrieved 11 October 2016 Princes Highway Bulli NSW 2516 to National Highway 1 Oak Flats NSW 2529 Google Maps 2021 Retrieved 10 October 2021 M1 Helensburgh NSW 2508 to Croome NSW 2527 Google Maps 2021 Retrieved 10 October 2021 M1 Croome NSW 2527 to Border Firetrail New South Wales Google Maps 2021 Retrieved 10 October 2021 Spatial Information Exchange New South Wales Land and Property Information archived from the original on 25 May 2008 retrieved 8 September 2011 Schedule of Classified Roads and State amp Regional Roads PDF Roads and Traffic Authority of New South Wales 31 January 2011 retrieved 8 September 2011 Roads and Traffic Authority PDF Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales Government of New South Wales vol 189 p 9185 25 October 2002 retrieved 8 September 2011External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Princes Highway RTA Webcam Suburban Sydney VicRoads Victorian road departmen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Princes Highway amp 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