West Coast Drive

West Coast Drive is a scenic north-south route along the Indian Ocean in the northern suburbs of Perth, Western Australia.[1]

West Coast Drive

West Coast Drive near Watermans Bay
General information
TypeRoad
Length7 km (4.3 mi)
Opened1930s
Tourist routes Tourist Drive 204 (north of Karrinup Road)[1]
Major junctions
South end West Coast Highway (State Route 71 / Tourist Drive 204), Trigg Beach
 
North end
Location(s)
Major suburbsNorth Beach, Watermans Bay, Marmion, Sorrento

History

The road was initially a street which formed part of North Beach, which from the 1920s onwards was a coastal village which served as a holiday destination for Perth residents. During the Great Depression a tent city was located at the North Beach Road intersection. The road had to navigate around the original Hamersley family residence at Beachton Street, but this was demolished in 1961 under Town Planning Scheme No.14 which was drafted in 1959 by the Shire of Perth in order that the road could be straightened. In 1967, the road was extended north to the newly built Sacred Heart College in Sorrento.

Before 1985, West Coast Drive was part of West Coast Highway and connected through to Scarborough. However, the demands of massive urban growth in the northern suburbs necessitated the extension of Marmion Avenue to Scarborough. West Coast Drive was cut off in Trigg and southbound traffic directed onto Karrinyup Road.

In recent years, two- and three-storey houses, often with wide front windows and balconies, have been constructed along the east side of the road.

Public transportation

Until 2015, during the summer its entire length, which is mostly a single-carriageway road with one lane in each direction and many curves, was served by Transperth bus routes ferrying passengers between the beaches, including Mettams Pool at Trigg, Watermans Beach, Marmion Beach and Sorrento Beach. Transperth abolished route 458 in 2015, and the still existing route 423 serves only the northern part of West Coast Drive.

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gollark: You know, most biologists agree that various human metabolic processes require oxygen.
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gollark: As it should be.
gollark: Perhaps they were delivering too many things and ran out of time.

See also

 Australian roads portal

References

  1. Distance book (12 ed.). Main Roads Western Australia. 2012. pp. 4–5. ISBN 0 7309 7657 2. Retrieved 8 October 2012.

KML is from Wikidata


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