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The Department of Transport and Main Roads (TMR), is a department of the Queensland Government. TMR was formed in April 2009 by merging Queensland Transport and the Department of Main Roads . [ 1 ] TMR manages Queensland's 33,000 km state road network, which includes 3,100 bridges.
The Minister for Local Government and Main Roads was responsible for the department; Warren Pitt was the last person in this portfolio. The department's head office was at 477 Boundary Street in Spring Hill, Brisbane. The department was one of a handful of government agencies in Queensland with a permanent public museum.
There are 21 Queensland Government departments, each responsible for delivering a portfolio of government legislation and policy. [1] Each portfolio area is led by a minister who is a senior member of the governing party in the state Legislative Assembly .
The Department of Main Roads may be the tile of the following organisations: Department of Main Roads (New South Wales) Department of Main Roads (Queensland) Main Roads Western Australia, formerly the Main Roads Department
Lawrence road: Regal Chowk - China Chowk: 4: 1.9: Mozang road: Mozang Chungi adda - Lahore Zoo: 4: 1.3: Lytton road: Qurtaba Chowk - Babari Chowk: 4: 1.5: Canal Bank Road: Thokar Niaz Beg - Khera: 8: 29: Signal Free Corridor Maulana Karbasi Road: PIA Main Buli'rd - Allah Hoo Chowk: 4: 2.5: Named After Encyclopedia Wahdat road: Ferozpur Road ...
Mount Lindesay Highway is an Australian national highway located in Queensland.The highway runs southwest from Brisbane, where it leaves Ipswich Road in the suburb of Moorooka (as Beaudesert Road to the Logan Motorway), to the Queensland – New South Wales border and is 116 kilometres (72 mi) in length. [1]
Nambour–Bli Bli Road is a continuous 8.1-kilometre (5.0 mi) road route in the Sunshine Coast local government area of Queensland, Australia. It is signed as State Route 10. [ 1 ] It is a state-controlled district road (number 130), rated as a local road of regional significance (LRRS).
The road is named after flying ace of Pakistan Air Force, Air Commodore Muhammad Mahmood Alam who was the recipient of the Pakistani military decoration, the Sitara-e-Jurrat (The star of courage) and a bar to it for his dog fight during the Indo Pakistan War of 1965 when he downed five Indian aircraft in less than a minute, the first four within 30 seconds, establishing a world record.