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M80 Ring Road

The M80 Ring Road (also known as simply the Ring Road or by the name of its constituent parts: Western Ring Road[2] and Metropolitan Ring Road[3]) is a currently incomplete urban freeway ring road around Melbourne, Australia. This article will deal with the entire length of the corridor for sake of completion, as well to avoid confusion between declarations.

M80 Ring Road

Western Ring Road
Metropolitan Ring Road

M80 Ring Road in Fawkner
Southwest end
Northeast end
Coordinates
General information
TypeFreeway
Length38.3 km (24 mi)[1]
Opened1992–1999
Route number(s) M80 (1997–present)
Former
route number
  • National Highway M80 (1997–2013)
    (Sunshine West–Thomastown)
  • Metro Route 80 (1992–1997)
    (Gowanbrae–Campbellfield)
  • Ring Road 80 (1992)
    (Tullamarine–Jacana)
Tourist routes Tourist Route 21
Ardeer–Laverton North
Major junctions
Southwest end Princes Freeway
West Gate Freeway
Laverton North, Melbourne
 
Northeast end Greensborough Bypass
Greensborough, Melbourne
Location(s)
Major suburbs / townsSunshine West, Ardeer, St Albans, Keilor East, Keilor Park, Tullamarine, Airport West, Gowanbrae, Campbellfield, Thomastown, Bundoora
Highway system

The ring road connects Melbourne's western suburbs and northern suburbs to other Victorian urban and rural freeways (the West Gate and Princes Freeways, Western Freeway, Calder Freeway, Tullamarine Freeway and Hume Freeway), and also relieves freight traffic from Sydney Road, Pascoe Vale Road and Geelong Road. With connections to every major interstate and regional freeways, it has encouraged both industrial and residential growth in Melbourne's western suburbs.[4]

A series of major upgrades along the entire route commenced in 2009, including widening and a Freeway Management System; the most recent section between Sydney and Edgars Roads commenced construction in 2020 and was completed in 2022, one year ahead of schedule.[5]

Route

 
EJ Whitten Bridge

The Western Ring Road officially begins at the West Gate Interchange in Laverton North, with ramps to and from the West Gate Freeway, Princes Freeway and Geelong Road, and heads north as a six-lane dual-carriageway until the Western Freeway/Fitzgerald Road interchange, widening to eight lanes and heading north-east, widening again to ten lanes at the Sunshine Avenue/McIntyre Road interchange and crossing the Maribyrnong River over the EJ Whitten Bridge (named after Australian rules football player Ted Whitten), then turning east and narrowing to eight lanes at the Pascoe Vale Road interchange, narrowing further to six lanes at the Dalton Road interchange, and again to four lanes at the Plenty Road interchange, before terminating at Greensborough Bypass in Greensborough.

The road has a non-peak speed limit of 100 km/h for almost its entire length; between Greensborough Bypass and Plenty Road, the speed limit drops to 80 km/h (formerly 90 km/h before freeway works completed). The Western Ring Road between the Western Highway and the Tullamarine Freeway was previously configured with variable speed limits, which can vary between 60 km/h and 100 km/h depending upon traffic conditions. As of the 2009-2023 upgrades, all upgraded sections now feature a Freeway Management System (similar to the system in place on the M1 corridor) which provide more detailed information to drivers (including variable speed limits) and has replaced the previous variable speed limit system between Ballarat Road (the current name for the previous Western Highway) and the Tullamarine Freeway.

Standard travel time for the M80 Ring Road is 25 minutes (17 minutes on the Western Ring Road and 8 minutes on the Metropolitan Ring Road) in both directions. However, peak period freeway travel times typically vary between 30 and 45 minutes in each direction, unless there are significant incidents, which can stretch travel times from 50 minutes to beyond one hour.

History

The Ring Road project was proposed as part of the 1969 Melbourne Transportation Plan (F3, F5 & F7 Freeway corridors) and has documented in almost every edition of the Melway street directory since that time. Construction of the Western Ring Road began in February 1989 with work on the Broadmeadows section,[6] and was completed with the final link between the Calder and Tullamarine Freeways. Under the Keating Government, a total $555 million was provided by the Federal Government for the Western Ring Road, with a $76 million contribution from the Victorian Government.[7]

 
Western Ring Road at Keilor Park

The project is officially divided into two sections:[2][3][8]

  • Western Ring Road: the section between the West Gate Freeway and Hume Highway (now Sydney Road).
  • Metropolitan Ring Road: the section between Hume Highway and Greensborough Bypass. The section between Greenborough Bypass and Plenty Road was originally called Northern Ring Road upon opening in April 1994, but was changed when the Plenty Road to Dalton Road section opened in November 1996, referred to since by VicRoads as the Metropolitan Ring Road.[7]

Completed in stages, the freeway opened to traffic as follows:

  • 1992 – Broadmeadows section (Stage 1, Tullamarine Freeway to Pascoe Vale Road), opened to traffic on 20 September 1992.[6][9]
  • 1993 – Broadmeadows section (Stage 2, Pascoe Vale Road to Sydney Road), opened to traffic on 7 July 1993; this section includes the Jacana Tunnel, which won an Excellence Award in the Public Works category awards by the Institution of Engineers Australia.[10]
  • 1994 – Greenborough Bypass to Plenty Road, 2.5 km section opened April 1994 (as "Northern Ring Road"), at a cost of $15.5 million.[10]
  • 1995 – Maribyrnong section (Ballarat Road to Keilor Park Drive), opened July 1995,[4] with the official opening of EJ Whitten Bridge by Premier of Victoria Jeff Kennett on 18 August 1995.[11]
  • 1996 – Ardeer section (Boundary Road to Ballarat Road), opened 6 March 1996.[11]
  • 1996 – West Gate/Princes Freeway interchange to Boundary Road, opened October 1996.[7]
  • 1996 – Dalton Road to Plenty Road, opened on 28 November 1996, at a cost of $28.8 million.[7]
  • 1996 – Keilor Park Drive to Calder Freeway, opened December 1996.[7]
  • 1997 – Calder Freeway to Tullamarine Freeway, the final section of the Western Ring Road (from the West Gate/Princes Highway interchange to Hume Highway (now Sydney Road)), opened 5 June 1997.[7]
  • 1999 – Sydney Road to Dalton Road, the final 6km section of the Metropolitan Ring Road (from Hume Highway (now Sydney Road) to Greensborough Bypass) opened 20 August 1999, at a cost of $140 million.[12]

The freeway was designated Ring Road 80 when its first stage opened, quickly replaced by Metropolitan Route 80 in 1992, and extended across successive stages as they opened. With Victoria's conversion to the newer alphanumeric system in the late 1990s, this was updated to M80 in 1997 (for the sections not declared a National Highway).[13]

The Whitlam Government introduced the federal National Roads Act 1974,[14] 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.[14]: S7  As an important connecting road between other National Highways linking to the capitals of New South Wales and South Australia, a portion of the Western Ring Road between the Hume and Western Highways was declared a National Highway in 1993 - parts of which were yet to be built at the time - allowing for direct Federal funding of its construction.[10] Once opened, this section was signed with a National Highway M80 shield, later extended east to the junction with the Hume Freeway when the Craigieburn bypass opened in 2005, and extended south to the junction with the Western Freeway when the Deer Park bypass opened in 2009. It was later changed to a plain route M80 sign in 2013, for continuity with the rest of the freeway and to complement all infrastructure and signage[15] during the 2009 to 2014 upgrade, although old signage still exists and has not yet been replaced.

The passing of the Road Management Act 2004[16] granted the responsibility of overall management and development of Victoria's major arterial roads to VicRoads: in 2004, VicRoads re-declared Western Ring Road (Freeway #1900) from Laverton North to Hume Highway in Fawkner,[2] and Metropolitan Ring Road (Freeway #1880) from Hume Highway in Fawkner to Greensborough Bypass in Greensborough;[3] however sign-posting (and VicRoads' own Declared Roads website[17]) subsequently state the name changes at the interchange with the Hume Freeway. From the upgrades beginning in 2009 onwards, it has been more common for both sections to be referred to as M80 Ring Road or simply the Ring Road, with newer signage and government websites increasingly reflecting this.[18]

An eastern extension to the Metropolitan Ring Road (the "missing link" to complete the ring road), tunnelling under Greensborough and through the Banyule Flats, to connect to Eastern Freeway at Bulleen, has now started construction as the North East Link project.

A study has been initiated by VicRoads to supplement the Western Ring Road with an Outer Metropolitan Ring Road.

2009–2023 upgrades

Initial upgrading and widening works of the Western and Metropolitan Ring Roads was carried out between 2009 and 2014, funded by the Federal Government Auslink 2 program.[needs update][19]

The entire length of the Freeway is being upgraded, within individual sections over a number of years. Initial work started in 2009 and work on some sections were completed in 2014.[when?] Along with the $2.25 billion upgrade, is a new 'Freeway Management System' that includes Ramp Signals (Traffic Lights located within on-ramps), overhead lane signs (electronic variable speed limits and lane symbols) & overhead electronic message boards; along with various new CCTV cameras and 'intelligent' sensors underground (to detect freeway congestion for signals). The entire upgrade is being jointly funded by the State and Federal governments, being fully controlled. managed and operated by VicRoads. This is the most major and expensive road upgrade in Victoria, since the M1 (Monash Freeway / Citylink) upgrade was completed in 2007/2008.

In late 2009, construction began on the upgrade and widening of 38 kilometres (24 mi) of the M80 from Princes Freeway at Laverton North to the Greensborough Highway at Greensborough. The first stage involved widening the 9.7 km (6.0 mi) stretch from Calder Freeway to Sydney Road from 6 to 8 lanes,[20] and was completed in May 2013.[21] Construction on the Western Highway to Sunshine Avenue section was completed in August 2013.[21] Construction on the Edgars Road to Plenty Road section was completed in April 2014.[21]

In mid 2015 to early 2016, the state and federal governments had announced A$300 million in funding to upgrade the remaining sections along the ring road, previously allocated to the cancelled East West Link road project. Construction on the Sunshine Avenue to Calder Freeway section was completed in September 2018.[21] The upgrade of the Sydney Road to Edgars Road section started construction in 2020 and was completed in May 2022.[22] The upgrade of the Plenty Road to Greensborough Highway section will be covered as part of the North East Link project, and the Princes Freeway to Western Freeway section is the last remaining section to be upgraded.

VicRoads had originally produced an official "M80 Upgrade Website" with links to a newly created site showing video simulations, maps and scheduled traffic disruptions on the freeway, for already- or nearly-completed sections. The website was revamped when Major Road Projects Victoria, established in 2019, took over management of the project.[21]

 
A panorama of the M80 Western ring road eastern off ramp at Sydney Road in Fawkner, Melbourne

Missing section

Currently, the easternmost point of the Metropolitan Ring Road terminates at Greensborough at the Greensborough Bypass. There have been numerous proposals to extend it to the Eastern Freeway, and thus complete the "missing link" in a freeway-standard ring road around Melbourne, starting from Laverton North and ending in Frankston. The resulting ring road will be similar to the size and scope of Sydney's Orbital Motorway and would enable traffic to transit between the Hume and Calder Highways and Melbourne's outer east without having to cross Melbourne's inner suburbs.

If the road is built, it would run through areas that are environmentally and politically sensitive, such as Viewbank, Banyule Flats, Eltham, Templestowe or Warrandyte. A link to the east was previously considered using the proposed tunnel to connect the Eastern Freeway with Melbourne's west, before its cancellation.

Another possible route for the freeway has been suggested that would result in existing transmission line corridors being utilised.[23] The official reservation for the extension ends at Ryans Road in Eltham North, but these transmission line corridors could be used to carry the freeway through to Eastlink in Ringwood. Environmental impacts would still be a problem including noise, pollution, possible destruction of vegetation and the interruption of wildlife crossings. Less opposition from local politicians and the public would be likely if the much more expensive option of tunnelling is chosen.

On 7 July 2008 it was announced by then Premier John Brumby that the completion of the missing section was again being considered by the Victorian State Government as part of a wider plan to deal with Melbourne's traffic problems.[24] A new freeway through some of the city's most environmentally sensitive areas is among a series of proposals considered in the plan. Environmental concerns about building the road through the green wedge and the disruption of communities in the area have been raised.

In December 2016, Premier Daniel Andrews announced plans for extending the freeway. The project is expected to cost around $10 billion. In May 2016, Infrastructure Victoria released its new consultancy options assessment report,[25] a preferred route was selected in 2017, early construction began in 2020, and major construction began in late 2022, for a proposed completion by 2027/28.[26]

Purpose

Much controversy surrounds the Metropolitan Ring Road project in Melbourne in many different topics including; environmental, economical, social, private & public transportation and both positive and negative aspects are well represented for each topic by many people and groups small and large. This has led to heavy debate in all areas of society in Melbourne from political and media to general public views and conversations.

The road serves various uses:

  • integrating the metropolitan area by linking middle and outer suburbs
  • assisting circumferential travel through the middle suburbs as opportunities for cross town movement are limited
  • linking the growing populations in the south-east and west suburbs to jobs and economic opportunities throughout the metropolitan area
  • providing access to Melbourne Airport, the ports of Melbourne and Geelong, and rail freight terminals, from all parts of Melbourne and from across the State
  • provide good access to the whole of the Melbourne metropolitan area to and from country Victoria and interstate.

Exits and interchanges

LGALocation[1][2][3]km[1]miDestinationsNotes
WyndhamLaverton North0.00.0  West Gate Freeway (M1 east) – City, Dandenong, Pakenham
    Princes Freeway (M1/Tourist Route 21 south-west) – Werribee, Geelong, Avalon Airport
Southwestern terminus of freeway and route M80; Tourist Route 21 continues southwest along Princes Freeway
Wyndham-Brimbank boundaryLaverton North-Derrimut-Sunshine West boundary1.71.1  Boundary Road – Truganina, Sunshine
BrimbankDerrimut-Sunshine West boundary3.01.97-Eleven service centres
4.72.9  Western Freeway (M8) – Ballarat, Horsham, Adelaide
Fitzgerald Road – Laverton, Ardeer
Ardeer7.94.9Kororoit Creek
  Ballarat Road (Metro Route 8) – Deer Park, SunshineNortheastern terminus of concurrency with Tourist Route 21
St AlbansSunshine North boundary10.76.6Furlong Road – St Albans, Sunshine
St AlbansSunshine NorthKealba tripoint12.37.6  McIntyre Road (Metro Route 41 north) – Taylors Lakes
  Sunshine Avenue (Metro Route 41 south) – Sunshine
Maribyrnong River13.18.1E.J. Whitten Bridge
Keilor East14.48.9  Keilor Park Drive (Metro Route 39) – Keilor Park, Avondale Heights
Keilor EastKeilor Park boundary15.99.9  Calder FreewayCity, BendigoNorth-eastbound exit to and entrance from Calder Freeway eastbound only, south-westbound exit to and entrance from Calder Freeway westbound only
Tullamarine17.811.1  Airport Drive (west) – Melbourne Airport
Westfield Drive (east) – Airport West
HumeMerri-bek boundary19.111.9Melrose Drive – Tullamarine, Airport WestSouth-westbound exit and north-westbound entrance only
TullamarineGladstone ParkGowanbrae tripoint19.512.1   Tullamarine Freeway (M2) – Docklands, Melbourne AirportNo north-eastbound exit to Tullamarine Freeway southbound, no south-westbound entrance from Tullamarine Freeway northbound
Jacana-Gladstone Park-Glenroy tripoint21.613.4Moonee Ponds Creek
Jacana-Broadmeadows-Glenroy tripoint22.313.9  Pascoe Vale Road (Metro Route 35) – Broadmeadows, GlenroyNorth-eastbound exit and south-westbound entrance only
Fawkner26.116.2  Sydney Road (Metro Route 55) – Craigieburn, CoburgSingle-point urban interchange
27.417.0Merri Creek
WhittleseaThomastown28.517.7  Hume Freeway (M31) – Seymour, SydneyName change: Western Ring Road (west), Metropolitan Ring Road (east)
30.018.6Edgars Road  – Thomastown, Epping
32.420.1Dalton Road – Epping, Reservoir
Whittlesea-Banyule boundaryBundoora35.822.2   Plenty Road (Metro Route 27 south/A51 north) – Bundoora, Whittlesea
BanyuleGreensborough-Watsonia North boundary38.323.8  Greensborough Bypass (Metro Route 46) – Diamond Creek, GreensboroughNortheastern terminus of freeway and route M80
North East Link – Greensborough, Balwyn NorthUnder construction
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Google (8 October 2021). "M80 Ring Road" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 8 October 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d VicRoads. "VicRoads – Register of Public Roads (Part A) 2015" (PDF). Government of Victoria. pp. 17–8. from the original on 1 May 2020. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d VicRoads. "VicRoads – Register of Public Roads (Part A) 2015" (PDF). Government of Victoria. p. 48. from the original on 1 May 2020. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  4. ^ a b Paul Mees (2001). "The short term effects of Melbourne's Western Ring Road" (PDF). Papers of 24th ATRF. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  5. ^ "M80 Upgrade Project Update".
  6. ^ a b "VicRoads Annual Report 1992-93". VicRoads. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 29 September 1993. p. 39.
  7. ^ a b c d e f "VicRoads Annual Report 1996-97". VicRoads. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 27 August 1997. pp. 14–5.
  8. ^ "Map of Declared Roads". Vicroads. Retrieved 27 May 2022.
  9. ^ Western Ring Road now open Australasian Transport News 30 September 1992 page 18
  10. ^ a b c "VicRoads Annual Report 1993-94". VicRoads. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 30 September 1994. pp. 6, 11, 19.
  11. ^ a b "VicRoads Annual Report 1995-96". VicRoads. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 18 October 1996. p. 14.
  12. ^ "VicRoads Annual Report 1999-2000". VicRoads. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 19 October 2000. p. 27.
  13. ^ "VicRoads Annual Report 1997-98". VicRoads. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 31 August 1998. p. 42.
  14. ^ a b National Roads Act 1974 (Cth)
  15. ^ VicRoads (September 2013). . Traffic Engineering Manual (3 ed.). State Government of Victoria. p. 34. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 December 2014. The use of National Highway shields for routes M/A8, A20, M31, M/A39 and M80 has been discontinued. They are now signed in the same way as other alphanumeric routes
  16. ^ State Government of Victoria. "Road Management Act 2004" (PDF). Government of Victoria. (PDF) from the original on 19 October 2021. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  17. ^ VicRoads. "VicRoads – Map of Declared Roads". VicRoads. Retrieved 19 December 2021.
  18. ^ "Then and now on the Western Ring Road".
  19. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 July 2008. Retrieved 16 July 2008.
  20. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 January 2010. Retrieved 8 April 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  21. ^ a b c d e Major Road Projects Victoria. "M80 Upgrade". Retrieved 8 October 2021.
  22. ^ Major Road Projects Victoria. "M80 Upgrade: Sydney Road to Edgars Road". Retrieved 8 October 2021.
  23. ^ The Age 9 July 2008—'Missing link' may drive MPs from power
  24. ^ The Age 8 July 2008—New orbital freeway plan for city
  25. ^ http://www.infrastructurevictoria.com.au/sites/default/files/images/Deloitte%20Aurecon%20-%20Options%20Assessment%201%20Report%20-%20FINAL.pdf.PDF, page 148
  26. ^ "'Missing link' in ring road to flood Eastern Freeway with traffic". The Age. 27 May 2018. Retrieved 30 May 2018.

ring, road, western, ring, road, redirects, here, motorway, zealand, western, ring, route, also, known, simply, ring, road, name, constituent, parts, western, ring, road, metropolitan, ring, road, currently, incomplete, urban, freeway, ring, road, around, melb. Western Ring Road redirects here For the motorway in New Zealand see Western Ring Route The M80 Ring Road also known as simply the Ring Road or by the name of its constituent parts Western Ring Road 2 and Metropolitan Ring Road 3 is a currently incomplete urban freeway ring road around Melbourne Australia This article will deal with the entire length of the corridor for sake of completion as well to avoid confusion between declarations M80 Ring RoadWestern Ring RoadMetropolitan Ring RoadVictoriaM80 Ring Road in FawknerSouthwest endNortheast endCoordinates37 49 40 S 144 49 01 E 37 827651 S 144 816946 E 37 827651 144 816946 Southwest end 37 41 40 S 145 05 34 E 37 694437 S 145 092655 E 37 694437 145 092655 Northeast end General informationTypeFreewayLength38 3 km 24 mi 1 Opened1992 1999Route number s M80 1997 present Formerroute numberNational Highway M80 1997 2013 Sunshine West Thomastown Metro Route 80 1992 1997 Gowanbrae Campbellfield Ring Road 80 1992 Tullamarine Jacana Tourist routesTourist Route 21Ardeer Laverton NorthMajor junctionsSouthwest endPrinces Freeway West Gate FreewayLaverton North Melbourne Western Freeway Calder Freeway Tullamarine Freeway Hume FreewayNortheast endGreensborough BypassGreensborough MelbourneLocation s Major suburbs townsSunshine West Ardeer St Albans Keilor East Keilor Park Tullamarine Airport West Gowanbrae Campbellfield Thomastown BundooraHighway systemHighways in Australia National Highway Freeways in Australia Highways in VictoriaThe ring road connects Melbourne s western suburbs and northern suburbs to other Victorian urban and rural freeways the West Gate and Princes Freeways Western Freeway Calder Freeway Tullamarine Freeway and Hume Freeway and also relieves freight traffic from Sydney Road Pascoe Vale Road and Geelong Road With connections to every major interstate and regional freeways it has encouraged both industrial and residential growth in Melbourne s western suburbs 4 A series of major upgrades along the entire route commenced in 2009 including widening and a Freeway Management System the most recent section between Sydney and Edgars Roads commenced construction in 2020 and was completed in 2022 one year ahead of schedule 5 Contents 1 Route 2 History 2 1 2009 2023 upgrades 3 Missing section 4 Purpose 5 Exits and interchanges 6 See also 7 ReferencesRoute Edit EJ Whitten Bridge The Western Ring Road officially begins at the West Gate Interchange in Laverton North with ramps to and from the West Gate Freeway Princes Freeway and Geelong Road and heads north as a six lane dual carriageway until the Western Freeway Fitzgerald Road interchange widening to eight lanes and heading north east widening again to ten lanes at the Sunshine Avenue McIntyre Road interchange and crossing the Maribyrnong River over the EJ Whitten Bridge named after Australian rules football player Ted Whitten then turning east and narrowing to eight lanes at the Pascoe Vale Road interchange narrowing further to six lanes at the Dalton Road interchange and again to four lanes at the Plenty Road interchange before terminating at Greensborough Bypass in Greensborough The road has a non peak speed limit of 100 km h for almost its entire length between Greensborough Bypass and Plenty Road the speed limit drops to 80 km h formerly 90 km h before freeway works completed The Western Ring Road between the Western Highway and the Tullamarine Freeway was previously configured with variable speed limits which can vary between 60 km h and 100 km h depending upon traffic conditions As of the 2009 2023 upgrades all upgraded sections now feature a Freeway Management System similar to the system in place on the M1 corridor which provide more detailed information to drivers including variable speed limits and has replaced the previous variable speed limit system between Ballarat Road the current name for the previous Western Highway and the Tullamarine Freeway Standard travel time for the M80 Ring Road is 25 minutes 17 minutes on the Western Ring Road and 8 minutes on the Metropolitan Ring Road in both directions However peak period freeway travel times typically vary between 30 and 45 minutes in each direction unless there are significant incidents which can stretch travel times from 50 minutes to beyond one hour History EditThe Ring Road project was proposed as part of the 1969 Melbourne Transportation Plan F3 F5 amp F7 Freeway corridors and has documented in almost every edition of the Melway street directory since that time Construction of the Western Ring Road began in February 1989 with work on the Broadmeadows section 6 and was completed with the final link between the Calder and Tullamarine Freeways Under the Keating Government a total 555 million was provided by the Federal Government for the Western Ring Road with a 76 million contribution from the Victorian Government 7 Western Ring Road at Keilor Park The project is officially divided into two sections 2 3 8 Western Ring Road the section between the West Gate Freeway and Hume Highway now Sydney Road Metropolitan Ring Road the section between Hume Highway and Greensborough Bypass The section between Greenborough Bypass and Plenty Road was originally called Northern Ring Road upon opening in April 1994 but was changed when the Plenty Road to Dalton Road section opened in November 1996 referred to since by VicRoads as the Metropolitan Ring Road 7 Completed in stages the freeway opened to traffic as follows 1992 Broadmeadows section Stage 1 Tullamarine Freeway to Pascoe Vale Road opened to traffic on 20 September 1992 6 9 1993 Broadmeadows section Stage 2 Pascoe Vale Road to Sydney Road opened to traffic on 7 July 1993 this section includes the Jacana Tunnel which won an Excellence Award in the Public Works category awards by the Institution of Engineers Australia 10 1994 Greenborough Bypass to Plenty Road 2 5 km section opened April 1994 as Northern Ring Road at a cost of 15 5 million 10 1995 Maribyrnong section Ballarat Road to Keilor Park Drive opened July 1995 4 with the official opening of EJ Whitten Bridge by Premier of Victoria Jeff Kennett on 18 August 1995 11 1996 Ardeer section Boundary Road to Ballarat Road opened 6 March 1996 11 1996 West Gate Princes Freeway interchange to Boundary Road opened October 1996 7 1996 Dalton Road to Plenty Road opened on 28 November 1996 at a cost of 28 8 million 7 1996 Keilor Park Drive to Calder Freeway opened December 1996 7 1997 Calder Freeway to Tullamarine Freeway the final section of the Western Ring Road from the West Gate Princes Highway interchange to Hume Highway now Sydney Road opened 5 June 1997 7 1999 Sydney Road to Dalton Road the final 6km section of the Metropolitan Ring Road from Hume Highway now Sydney Road to Greensborough Bypass opened 20 August 1999 at a cost of 140 million 12 The freeway was designated Ring Road 80 when its first stage opened quickly replaced by Metropolitan Route 80 in 1992 and extended across successive stages as they opened With Victoria s conversion to the newer alphanumeric system in the late 1990s this was updated to M80 in 1997 for the sections not declared a National Highway 13 The Whitlam Government introduced the federal National Roads Act 1974 14 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 14 S7 As an important connecting road between other National Highways linking to the capitals of New South Wales and South Australia a portion of the Western Ring Road between the Hume and Western Highways was declared a National Highway in 1993 parts of which were yet to be built at the time allowing for direct Federal funding of its construction 10 Once opened this section was signed with a National Highway M80 shield later extended east to the junction with the Hume Freeway when the Craigieburn bypass opened in 2005 and extended south to the junction with the Western Freeway when the Deer Park bypass opened in 2009 It was later changed to a plain route M80 sign in 2013 for continuity with the rest of the freeway and to complement all infrastructure and signage 15 during the 2009 to 2014 upgrade although old signage still exists and has not yet been replaced The passing of the Road Management Act 2004 16 granted the responsibility of overall management and development of Victoria s major arterial roads to VicRoads in 2004 VicRoads re declared Western Ring Road Freeway 1900 from Laverton North to Hume Highway in Fawkner 2 and Metropolitan Ring Road Freeway 1880 from Hume Highway in Fawkner to Greensborough Bypass in Greensborough 3 however sign posting and VicRoads own Declared Roads website 17 subsequently state the name changes at the interchange with the Hume Freeway From the upgrades beginning in 2009 onwards it has been more common for both sections to be referred to as M80 Ring Road or simply the Ring Road with newer signage and government websites increasingly reflecting this 18 An eastern extension to the Metropolitan Ring Road the missing link to complete the ring road tunnelling under Greensborough and through the Banyule Flats to connect to Eastern Freeway at Bulleen has now started construction as the North East Link project A study has been initiated by VicRoads to supplement the Western Ring Road with an Outer Metropolitan Ring Road 2009 2023 upgrades Edit Initial upgrading and widening works of the Western and Metropolitan Ring Roads was carried out between 2009 and 2014 funded by the Federal Government Auslink 2 program needs update 19 The entire length of the Freeway is being upgraded within individual sections over a number of years Initial work started in 2009 and work on some sections were completed in 2014 when Along with the 2 25 billion upgrade is a new Freeway Management System that includes Ramp Signals Traffic Lights located within on ramps overhead lane signs electronic variable speed limits and lane symbols amp overhead electronic message boards along with various new CCTV cameras and intelligent sensors underground to detect freeway congestion for signals The entire upgrade is being jointly funded by the State and Federal governments being fully controlled managed and operated by VicRoads This is the most major and expensive road upgrade in Victoria since the M1 Monash Freeway Citylink upgrade was completed in 2007 2008 In late 2009 construction began on the upgrade and widening of 38 kilometres 24 mi of the M80 from Princes Freeway at Laverton North to the Greensborough Highway at Greensborough The first stage involved widening the 9 7 km 6 0 mi stretch from Calder Freeway to Sydney Road from 6 to 8 lanes 20 and was completed in May 2013 21 Construction on the Western Highway to Sunshine Avenue section was completed in August 2013 21 Construction on the Edgars Road to Plenty Road section was completed in April 2014 21 In mid 2015 to early 2016 the state and federal governments had announced A 300 million in funding to upgrade the remaining sections along the ring road previously allocated to the cancelled East West Link road project Construction on the Sunshine Avenue to Calder Freeway section was completed in September 2018 21 The upgrade of the Sydney Road to Edgars Road section started construction in 2020 and was completed in May 2022 22 The upgrade of the Plenty Road to Greensborough Highway section will be covered as part of the North East Link project and the Princes Freeway to Western Freeway section is the last remaining section to be upgraded VicRoads had originally produced an official M80 Upgrade Website with links to a newly created site showing video simulations maps and scheduled traffic disruptions on the freeway for already or nearly completed sections The website was revamped when Major Road Projects Victoria established in 2019 took over management of the project 21 A panorama of the M80 Western ring road eastern off ramp at Sydney Road in Fawkner MelbourneMissing section EditMain article North East Link Currently the easternmost point of the Metropolitan Ring Road terminates at Greensborough at the Greensborough Bypass There have been numerous proposals to extend it to the Eastern Freeway and thus complete the missing link in a freeway standard ring road around Melbourne starting from Laverton North and ending in Frankston The resulting ring road will be similar to the size and scope of Sydney s Orbital Motorway and would enable traffic to transit between the Hume and Calder Highways and Melbourne s outer east without having to cross Melbourne s inner suburbs If the road is built it would run through areas that are environmentally and politically sensitive such as Viewbank Banyule Flats Eltham Templestowe or Warrandyte A link to the east was previously considered using the proposed tunnel to connect the Eastern Freeway with Melbourne s west before its cancellation Another possible route for the freeway has been suggested that would result in existing transmission line corridors being utilised 23 The official reservation for the extension ends at Ryans Road in Eltham North but these transmission line corridors could be used to carry the freeway through to Eastlink in Ringwood Environmental impacts would still be a problem including noise pollution possible destruction of vegetation and the interruption of wildlife crossings Less opposition from local politicians and the public would be likely if the much more expensive option of tunnelling is chosen On 7 July 2008 it was announced by then Premier John Brumby that the completion of the missing section was again being considered by the Victorian State Government as part of a wider plan to deal with Melbourne s traffic problems 24 A new freeway through some of the city s most environmentally sensitive areas is among a series of proposals considered in the plan Environmental concerns about building the road through the green wedge and the disruption of communities in the area have been raised In December 2016 Premier Daniel Andrews announced plans for extending the freeway The project is expected to cost around 10 billion In May 2016 Infrastructure Victoria released its new consultancy options assessment report 25 a preferred route was selected in 2017 early construction began in 2020 and major construction began in late 2022 for a proposed completion by 2027 28 26 Purpose EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Much controversy surrounds the Metropolitan Ring Road project in Melbourne in many different topics including environmental economical social private amp public transportation and both positive and negative aspects are well represented for each topic by many people and groups small and large This has led to heavy debate in all areas of society in Melbourne from political and media to general public views and conversations The road serves various uses integrating the metropolitan area by linking middle and outer suburbs assisting circumferential travel through the middle suburbs as opportunities for cross town movement are limited linking the growing populations in the south east and west suburbs to jobs and economic opportunities throughout the metropolitan area providing access to Melbourne Airport the ports of Melbourne and Geelong and rail freight terminals from all parts of Melbourne and from across the State provide good access to the whole of the Melbourne metropolitan area to and from country Victoria and interstate Exits and interchanges EditLGALocation 1 2 3 km 1 miDestinationsNotesWyndhamLaverton North0 00 0 West Gate Freeway M1 east City Dandenong Pakenham Princes Freeway M1 Tourist Route 21 south west Werribee Geelong Avalon AirportSouthwestern terminus of freeway and route M80 Tourist Route 21 continues southwest along Princes FreewayWyndham Brimbank boundaryLaverton North Derrimut Sunshine West boundary1 71 1 Boundary Road Truganina SunshineBrimbankDerrimut Sunshine West boundary3 01 97 Eleven service centres4 72 9 Western Freeway M8 Ballarat Horsham AdelaideFitzgerald Road Laverton ArdeerArdeer7 94 9Kororoit Creek Ballarat Road Metro Route 8 Deer Park SunshineNortheastern terminus of concurrency with Tourist Route 21St Albans Sunshine North boundary10 76 6Furlong Road St Albans SunshineSt Albans Sunshine North Kealba tripoint12 37 6 McIntyre Road Metro Route 41 north Taylors Lakes Sunshine Avenue Metro Route 41 south SunshineMaribyrnong River13 18 1E J Whitten BridgeKeilor East14 48 9 Keilor Park Drive Metro Route 39 Keilor Park Avondale HeightsKeilor East Keilor Park boundary15 99 9 Calder Freeway City BendigoNorth eastbound exit to and entrance from Calder Freeway eastbound only south westbound exit to and entrance from Calder Freeway westbound onlyTullamarine17 811 1 Airport Drive west Melbourne AirportWestfield Drive east Airport WestHume Merri bek boundary19 111 9Melrose Drive Tullamarine Airport WestSouth westbound exit and north westbound entrance onlyTullamarine Gladstone Park Gowanbrae tripoint19 512 1 Tullamarine Freeway M2 Docklands Melbourne AirportNo north eastbound exit to Tullamarine Freeway southbound no south westbound entrance from Tullamarine Freeway northboundJacana Gladstone Park Glenroy tripoint21 613 4Moonee Ponds CreekJacana Broadmeadows Glenroy tripoint22 313 9 Pascoe Vale Road Metro Route 35 Broadmeadows GlenroyNorth eastbound exit and south westbound entrance onlyFawkner26 116 2 Sydney Road Metro Route 55 Craigieburn CoburgSingle point urban interchange27 417 0Merri CreekWhittleseaThomastown28 517 7 Hume Freeway M31 Seymour SydneyName change Western Ring Road west Metropolitan Ring Road east 30 018 6Edgars Road Thomastown Epping32 420 1Dalton Road Epping ReservoirWhittlesea Banyule boundaryBundoora35 822 2 Plenty Road Metro Route 27 south A51 north Bundoora WhittleseaBanyuleGreensborough Watsonia North boundary38 323 8 Greensborough Bypass Metro Route 46 Diamond Creek GreensboroughNortheastern terminus of freeway and route M80North East Link Greensborough Balwyn NorthUnder construction1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminus Incomplete access Route transition UnopenedSee also Edit Australian Roads portalFreeways in Australia Freeways in Melbourne Road transport in VictoriaReferences Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Western Ring Road a b c Google 8 October 2021 M80 Ring Road Map Google Maps Google Retrieved 8 October 2021 a b c d VicRoads VicRoads Register of Public Roads Part A 2015 PDF Government of Victoria pp 17 8 Archived from the original on 1 May 2020 Retrieved 19 October 2021 a b c d VicRoads VicRoads Register of Public Roads Part A 2015 PDF Government of Victoria p 48 Archived from the original on 1 May 2020 Retrieved 19 October 2021 a b Paul Mees 2001 The short term effects of Melbourne s Western Ring Road PDF Papers of 24th ATRF Retrieved 8 May 2013 M80 Upgrade Project Update a b VicRoads Annual Report 1992 93 VicRoads Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 29 September 1993 p 39 a b c d e f VicRoads Annual Report 1996 97 VicRoads Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 27 August 1997 pp 14 5 Map of Declared Roads Vicroads Retrieved 27 May 2022 Western Ring Road now open Australasian Transport News 30 September 1992 page 18 a b c VicRoads Annual Report 1993 94 VicRoads Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 30 September 1994 pp 6 11 19 a b VicRoads Annual Report 1995 96 VicRoads Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 18 October 1996 p 14 VicRoads Annual Report 1999 2000 VicRoads Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 19 October 2000 p 27 VicRoads Annual Report 1997 98 VicRoads Melbourne Victorian Government Library Service 31 August 1998 p 42 a b National Roads Act 1974 Cth VicRoads September 2013 Direction Signs and Route Numbering non Freeway Traffic Engineering Manual 3 ed State Government of Victoria p 34 Archived from the original PDF on 19 December 2014 The use of National Highway shields for routes M A8 A20 M31 M A39 and M80 has been discontinued They are now signed in the same way as other alphanumeric routes State Government of Victoria Road Management Act 2004 PDF Government of Victoria Archived PDF from the original on 19 October 2021 Retrieved 19 October 2021 VicRoads VicRoads Map of Declared Roads VicRoads Retrieved 19 December 2021 Then and now on the Western Ring Road AusLink 2 Western Ring Road PDF Archived from the original PDF on 22 July 2008 Retrieved 16 July 2008 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 6 January 2010 Retrieved 8 April 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b c d e Major Road Projects Victoria M80 Upgrade Retrieved 8 October 2021 Major Road Projects Victoria M80 Upgrade Sydney Road to Edgars Road Retrieved 8 October 2021 The Age 9 July 2008 Missing link may drive MPs from power The Age 8 July 2008 New orbital freeway plan for city http www infrastructurevictoria com au sites default files images Deloitte 20Aurecon 20 20Options 20Assessment 201 20Report 20 20FINAL pdf PDF page 148 Missing link in ring road to flood Eastern Freeway with traffic The Age 27 May 2018 Retrieved 30 May 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title M80 Ring Road amp oldid 1135024948, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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