Road Photos & Information: New South Wales
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Hume Highway
(National Highway 31) - Historic Photos: Goulburn To Yass (Decommissioned) |
Statistics:
- Length: 500 km (Goulburn to Yass: 83 km)
- Northern Terminus: Narellan Road (Metroad 9) interchange at Mt Annan, near Campbelltown on the outskirts of southwestern Sydney.
- Southern Terminus: NSW-Vic border at Albury
- Miscellaneous: Continues as Hume Freeway (M31) at the Victorian border and travels for 303 km to the Metropolitan Ring Road (M80).
- Suburbs, Towns & Localities along route: Goulburn, Gunning and Yass
Route Numbering:
- Former:
- Decommissioned: 2013
- Road Authority Internal Classification: HW2 1
General Information:
General Information:
The Hume Highway is one of Australia's most vital
highway links. Providing access between Sydney and Melbourne,
Australia's 2 largest cities. The National Highway section of the Hume
Highway consists of almost 100% dual carriageway road, either rural
expressway or motorway standard. Works to duplicate small sections of
highway that are not dual carriageway are well underway.
In NSW, the highway in one form or another started
life as the Great South Road, linking Sydney with the southern
highlands and eventually beyond. The highway was named in 1928 after
Hamilton Hume (1797-1873), a famous explorer in the early 19th century
who, in 1824, in conjunction with William Hovell first found an
overland route between Sydney and the infant colonial outpost of Port
Phillip, the original name of Melbourne.
NH31 is the main freight and commuter route between
Sydney and Melbourne and has gone through a massive amount of
transformation over the past 30 or so years, with many towns being
bypassed along its route as well and gradual upgrades to motorway
standards. Since the 1960s, the road has either been duplicated, where
alignments allow for it, and also large deviations have also been part
of the upgrade process.
The route around the Mittagong area averages around
16,000 vehicles every day, in other sections the number drops off a
little or closer to Sydney increases. 2
The route forms the Remembrance Driveway which
honours war veterans, click here for the Remembrance Driveway web site.
Here are some interesting statistics on the Hume Highway: 2
- The Goulburn Bypass is 13 km of concrete dual carriageway.
- The Cullerin Range Deviation consists of 34 km of dual carriageway.
- 17 km of dual carriageways between the Cullarin Range Deviation and the Yass Bypass.
- The Yass Bypass, has 15 bridges and 18 km of dual carriageways.
History:
- 1950s: In 1952, a group of citizens met and
formed a committee under Lt-General Sir Frank Berryman to create a
national memorial to servicemen by using trees and shrubs as living
memorials. The NSW Premier, J J Cahill, officially launched the scheme
on 9 December 1953. The Remembrance Driveway project as it was called
started on 5 February 1954, when trees were planted at either end of
the Driveway at the War Memorial, Canberra, and in Macquarie Place,
Sydney, by the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh. By June 1959, 10,000
trees had been planted. Since then, planting of trees in avenues or
groves has continued. When the M5 Motorway replaced the Hume Highway
(and also Camden Valley Way) south of Liverpool, it became the focus
for planting trees and shrubs in remembrance. 1
- 1970: Dual carriageway and new bridges built,
bypassing the old bridge from 1930s at Boxers Creek, north of Goulburn 1
- 1972: Completion of the grade separated
interchange between Hume Hwy and Federal Hwy at Wollogorang, south of
Goulburn. Also computer based roadsign design trialled for the first
time. The first signs designed using the system were for installation
on the Hume Hwy at Yass. 3
- 1992: Mittagong and Goulburn Bypasses open
- 1994: Most of the highway route between
Breadalbane, west of Goulburn, and Derringullen Creek, west of Yass,
was deviated. This included a bypassing of the Cullerin Range
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Federal Highway Interchange:
The grade separated junction of the Hume (NH31) and Federal (NH23) Highways, Wollogorang, south of Goulburn, which was completed in 1972.
Image © Department of Main Roads.
Scanned
from The Roadmakers, A History of Main Roads in New South Wales, ISBN 0
7240 0439 4
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Yass River:
Steel lattice truss bridge constructed in 1871 over the Yass River in Yass.
Image © Department of Main Roads.
Scanned
from The Roadmakers, A History of Main Roads in New South Wales, ISBN 0
7240 0439 4
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1 Roads and Traffic Authority
2 Department of Infrastructure,
Transport, Regional Development and Local Government
3 Department of Main Roads.
The Roadmakers, A History of Main Roads in New South Wales, ISBN 0
7240 0439 4
Last updated: 17-Dec-2019 0:55
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