R61 (South Africa)

The R61 is a provincial route in South Africa that connects Beaufort West with Port Shepstone via Graaff-Reinet, Queenstown, Mthatha and Port Edward.

Provincial route R61
Route information
Maintained by WCDTPW, SANRAL and ECDRPW
Length1,061 km (659 mi)
Major junctions
West end N1 / N12 in Beaufort West
  N9 in Aberdeen
R63 in Graaff-Reinet
N9 near Bethesdaweg
N10 in Cradock
R67 in Queenstown
N6 in Queenstown
N6 southeast of Queenstown
R58 in Ngcobo
N2 in Mthatha
East end N2 in Port Shepstone
Location
Major citiesBeaufort West, Aberdeen, Graaff-Reinet, Cradock, Tarkastad, Queenstown, Ngcobo, Mthatha, Libode, Bizana, Port Edward, Margate, Port Shepstone
Highway system
Numbered routes of South Africa
R60R62

The R61 is co-signed with the N9 for 103 kilometres from Aberdeen through Graaff-Reinet to Bethesdaweg, and with the N6 for 18 kilometres near Queenstown.

Route

KwaZulu-Natal

The R61 begins in Port Shepstone, KwaZulu-Natal at an intersection with the N2 Highway from Durban. As the N2 leaves the freeway at an off-ramp and becomes the road westwards towards Harding and Kokstad, the R61 becomes the freeway south-south-west through the KwaZulu-Natal South Coast. As the 1st section is maintained by SANRAL, the R61 is a toll road from the N2 Interchange up to the Alford Avenue off-ramp in Ramsgate, just after Margate (16km). At Ramsgate, it stops being both a toll road and a highway. From Port Shepstone to Ramsgate, the R61 is followed by the R620.

From Ramsgate, the R61 resumes south-south-west for 25 kilometres to Port Edward. Just after Port Edward, the R61 leaves the KwaZulu-Natal Province and crosses the Mtamvuna River via the C. H. Mitchell Bridge into the Eastern Cape Province.

Eastern Cape

From the provincial boundary (Mtamvuna River), the R61 heads north-west for 50km to the town of Bizana, which it bypasses to the south. From Bizana, the R61 continues westwards for 25 kilometres to reach a junction with the R394 Road, where the R61 turns southwards and heads 110 kilometres to cross the Mzimvubu River and bypass the town of Port St. Johns to the north. Just after crossing the river, it continues westwards for 87 kilometres, bypassing Libode, to the city of Mthatha, where it crosses the Mthatha River and meets the N2 National Route again in the city centre.

From Mthatha, the R61 heads westwards for 83 kilometres, bypassing Mthatha Airport, to the town of Ngcobo, where it meets the eastern terminus of the R58 Road and the R61 turns to the south-south-west. At the R409 intersection near Tsomo, the R61 turns to the west and heads for 80 kilometres to reach a t-junction with the N6 National Route. They become one road north-west into the town of Queenstown (renamed Komani in February 2016). At the roundabout with Barrable Street in Komani, the R61 becomes its own road west-south-west and after almost 2 kilometres, it meets the northern terminus of the R67 Road at a roundabout. The R61 heads westwards for 136 kilometres, through Tarkastad, to the town of Cradock, where it meets the N10 National Route. The R61 & N10 are one road northwards through the city centre of Cradock, continuing by a left turn (Commissioner Street), a right turn (JA Calata Street) and another left turn, to cross the Great Fish River.

The R61 and the N10 remain as one road for another 4.5km west-north-west, before the R61 becomes its own road westwards. The R61 continues for 85 kilometres as the Wapadsberg Pass to reach a junction with the N9 National Route south-east of Bethesdaweg. They are one road southwards into the town of Graaff-Reinet, where they meet and are co-signed for a few kilometres with the R63 Route, crossing the Sundays River. From Graaff-Reinet, the R61 & N9 remain as one road west-south-west for 55km up to the town of Aberdeen. At the 4-way-junction with Hoop Street (R338), the R61 stops co-signing with the N9 and becomes the road westwards from this junction.

From Aberdeen, the R61 heads westwards for 148 kilometres, crossing into the Western Cape Province, to enter the town of Beaufort West and reach its western terminus at a junction with the N1 and N12 National Route co-signage.

Developments

As of 2018, there are plans to give the first section of the R61, from its starting junction with the N2 in Port Shepstone to its other junction with the N2 in Mthatha, to the N2 Route.[1]

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See also

References


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