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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.
The New England Highway runs from Glengallan to Warwick concurrent with the Cunningham Highway. State-controlled roads that intersect with that section of road are not included in this article. The New England Highway does not intersect with Stanthorpe–Texas Road, but traffic can transition between them via Pancor Road.
New England Highway, a highway in the Hunter Valley and New England regions; Tapleys Hill Road, a road in the western suburbs of Adelaide; A15 motorway (Belgium), a road connecting La Louvière and Liège; A-15 expressway (Canada), a road connecting the United States border at Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle and Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts
Current backers of the highway propose an east–west axis through northern and central Maine; these could cover up to three existing surface ports of entry on the U.S.-Canada border, two from Québec; and one from New Brunswick. Any new highway achieving the New Brunswick crossing would run from Interstate 395 in Brewer, Maine, to the ...
When Pacific Highway's Grafton bypass opened in May 2020, Gwydir Highway (as Highway 12) was officially extended east along the old alignment of Pacific Highway to Tyndale, on 5 July 2022, [9] although the road is known locally and sign-posted as Big River Way. Gwydir Highway today, as part of Highway 12, still retains this declaration.
National Highway Sign located on the Stuart Highway near Darwin, listing distances to key locations on this highway. Map of the National Highway System The National Highway (part of the National Land Transport Network ) is a system of roads connecting all mainland states and territories of Australia , and is the major network of highways and ...
State Strategic Touring Routes are road routes in Queensland, Australia, which have been identified as significant to motoring tourists.These are the primary routes used by tourists as they provide the connections between popular tourist locations, and consequently have high volumes of tourist traffic.
Canada operated a station about a mile north of the border 1904–1905 and closer to the border 1914–1923, 1926, 1931–1941 and from the mid-1940s. [24] In the 1970s, both the US and Canada constructed new border facilities to better accommodate regular recreational traffic.