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  2. Princes Highway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princes_Highway

    Princes Highway is a major road in Australia, extending from Sydney via Melbourne to Adelaide through the states of New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia.It has a length of 1,941 kilometres (1,206 mi) (along Highway 1) or 1,898 kilometres (1,179 mi) via the former alignments of the highway, [citation needed] although these routes are slower and connections to the bypassed sections of ...

  3. Princes Freeway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princes_Freeway

    The Maltby Bypass was Victoria's first freeway which opened on 16 June 1961, and was the first section of Princes Freeway to open. [3]Both sections of Princes Freeway were signed National Route 1, either inheriting it when converted from older sections of Princes Highway, or assigned when newly constructed to bypass a section of it.

  4. Old Princes Highway (Victoria) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Princes_Highway_(Victoria)

    Old Princes Highway is a collection of roads, described as any part of an earlier route designated as Princes Highway, located in Victoria, Australia.Sections of the road run through Geelong, Werribee, and through the outer fringes of south-eastern Melbourne eventually to Morwell East.

  5. List of freeways in Victoria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_freeways_in_Victoria

    Its major junctions are Western Ring Road, Princes Highway, Berwick-Cranbourne Road and Strzelecki Highway. It is the second busiest freeway in Victoria after the Monash Freeway. The major towns it passes through are Tralagon, Morwell, Moe, Warragul, Pakenham, Berwick and Geelong. At the Victoria/New South Wales border the freeway becomes the ...

  6. South Eastern Freeway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Eastern_Freeway

    South Eastern Freeway is a 73 km (45 mi) freeway in South Australia (SA). It is a part of the National Highway network linking the state capital cities of Adelaide, SA, and Melbourne, Victoria, and is signed as route M1.

  7. List of road routes in Victoria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_road_routes_in...

    – re-aligned along Princes Link and Princes Highways from Berwick to Nar Nar Goon along current alignment (replaced by / /) when Pakenham bypass opened in 2007, Princes Link Highway renamed O'Shea Road in 2022 – continues east as along Princes Highway (east) to VIC/NSW border M2 Tullamarine Freeway: Melbourne Airport

  8. South Gippsland Highway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Gippsland_Highway

    South Gippsland Highway commences at the intersection with Princes Highway in Dandenong, and heads in a south-eastly direction as a four-lane, dual-carriageway road towards the northern shores of Western Port Bay, through Cranbourne and Tooradin, until it reaches the interchange with Bass Highway to Phillip Island outside Lang Lang, after which it is entirely an undivided rural highway.

  9. Princes Motorway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princes_Motorway

    The northern terminus of Princes Motorway, looking south from Waterfall, pictured in 2007.. In the north, Princes Motorway commences at the interchange with Princes Highway at Waterfall and heads south as a four-lane, dual-carriageway road, taking more or less a parallel route with Princes Highway until the sprawling interchange with Appin Road and Princes Highway at Bulli Tops.