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New South Wales. Road routes in New South Wales assist drivers navigating roads in urban, rural, and scenic areas of the state. Today all numbered routes in the state are allocated a letter (M, A, B or D) in addition to a one- or -two digit number, with 'M' routes denoting motorways, 'A' routes denoting routes of national significance, 'B' routes denoting routes of state significance, and 'D ...
NSW/QLD border Tweed Heads 2.5 km (1.6 mi) – allocated when Tugun Bypass opened in 2008 as an extension of the Queensland route into NSW (replacing ), currently the only active state route in New South Wales – continues north as along Gold Coast Highway into QLD to Pacific Pines: State Route 78 Waterfall Way: Armidale
Major intersections, from south to north include junctions with the Warringah Freeway, Lane Cove Tunnel, Gore Hill Freeway, Mona Vale Road / Ryde Road, Cumberland Highway, Pacific Motorway, Motorway Link, Central Coast Highway, Newcastle Inner City Bypass, New England Highway, Oxley Highway, Waterfall Way, Summerland Way, Gwydir Highway ...
New South Wales. The present highway network in New South Wales, Australia was established in August 1928 when the Main Roads Board (the predecessor of the Department of Main Roads, Roads & Traffic Authority and Roads & Maritime Services) superseded the 1924 main road classifications and established the basis of the existing New South Wales main road system.
The New South Wales section of Pacific Highway from Brunswick Heads to the state border with Queensland was re-declared as part of Pacific Motorway in February 2013. [37] The passing of the Roads Act of 1993 [38] through the Parliament of New South Wales updated road classifications and the way they could be declared within New South Wales ...
New England Highway is an 883-kilometre (549 mi) long [1] highway in Australia running from Yarraman, north of Toowoomba, Queensland, at its northern end to Hexham at Newcastle, New South Wales, at its southern end. It is part of Australia's National Highway system, and forms part of the inland route between Brisbane and Sydney. [3]
In New South Wales, Highway 1 is a 1,351-kilometre (839 mi) long [1] route that crosses the state, from the Queensland/New South Wales border near Tweed Heads to the Victorian border near Timbillica. It provides the main coastal route between Brisbane and Melbourne via Sydney.
M1 Pacific Motorway is a 127-kilometre (79 mi) motorway linking Sydney to Newcastle via the Central Coast and Hunter regions of New South Wales.Formerly known but still commonly referred to by both the public and the government as the F3 Freeway, Sydney–Newcastle Freeway, and Sydney–Newcastle Expressway, it is part of the AusLink road corridor between Sydney and Brisbane.