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Kilcoy is a rural town and locality in the Somerset Region, Queensland, Australia. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] In the 2021 census , the locality of Kilcoy had a population of 1,996 people. [ 1 ]
Esk–Kilcoy Road is a state-controlled district road (number 405) rated as a local road of regional significance (LRRS). [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It runs from the Brisbane Valley Highway in Esk to the D'Aguilar Highway in Woolmar , a distance of 46.8 kilometres (29.1 mi).
Kilcoy-Murgon Road is a major inland rural road located in Queensland, Australia. It is a state-controlled district road (number 491) rated as a local road of regional significance (LRRS). It is a state-controlled district road (number 491) rated as a local road of regional significance (LRRS).
Kilcoy–Beerwah Road commences as State Route 6 at an intersection with the D'Aguilar Highway in Woodford. It runs north-east and north through Stanmore and Cedarton, passing the exit to Commissioners Flat Road to the south-east. It then climbs the western slope of the Conondale Range and passes the exit to Maleny–Stanley River Road to the ...
Esk–Kilcoy Road – east – Kilcoy (via Somerset Dam) Harlin: 89.5: 55.6: D'Aguilar Highway (State Route A17) – north–west / (State Route 85) – east – Moore, Yarraman, Kilcoy, Sunshine Coast: State Route 85 northern concurrency terminus: continues east as D'Aguilar Highway. North–west to Moore and Yarraman; east to Kilcoy and ...
Bruce Highway (Queensland Highway A1) north – Rockhampton / south – Mount Larcom: Northern end of Burnett Highway. Banana: Dululu: 63.0: 39.1: Leichhardt Highway (State Route A5) north–west – Westwood / south–west – Wowan: Biloela: 135.1: 83.9: Dawson Highway (State Route 60) west – Banana / east – Calliope
Sandy Creek is located northeast of Kilcoy in South East Queensland. [3] Many parts of Sandy Creek are elevated along the southern Conondale Range and some of the range is protected within Bellthorpe National Park. [3] The locality has the following mountains:
Queensland is in the process of converting to an alphanumeric route numbering system, with a letter denoting the importance and standard of the route. The previous shield-based system consisted of various route types – national highways, national routes, and state routes – with each type depicted by a different route marker design.