Yarra Glen (Canberra)

Yarra Glen is a major grade separated arterial road in Canberra. It is 3 km (1.9 mi) in length connects South Canberra to the Woden Valley district. It links at its northern end to Adelaide Avenue, and at its southern end to Melrose Drive and Yamba Drive via a large roundabout.[1][2] It was designed to have no traffic lights nor cross roads on it.

Yarra Glen

General information
TypeParkway
LocationCanberra
Length3 km (1.9 mi)[1]
Opened21 December 1967 (1967-12-21)
Gazetted29 September 1966
Tourist routes
  • ACT Tourist Drive 5
  • (Kent St to Cotter Road)
Major junctions
North end
South end
Location(s)
Major suburbs / townsYarralumla, Deakin, Curtin, Hughes
Highway system

Route description

Yarra Glen continues from the western end of Adelaide Avenue, at Novar Street interchange. As the road begins to curve towards the south ramps are provided to Cotter Road, the road continues in a gradual curve before straightening when heading roughly north-south. Another interchange is provided halfway along this section to Carruthers Street, and the roadway terminates at a large roundabout at the northern end of Woden Town Centre, which interfaces with the northern ends of Melrose Drive and Yamba Drive.[1][2]

History

The National Capital Development Commission unveiled its plans for Yarra Glen, which was then known as the Woden Parkway, on 22 January 1965. It was originally proposed to continue north through Yarralumla to meet with a then unbuilt extension what is now part of Parkes Way on the northern side of Lake Burley Griffin, this would have included a major bridge across the lake twice the length of the Commonwealth Avenue bridge. And also to have extended further south into the Woden Valley, connecting via a number of interchanges to collector roads. and each carriageway was to have 2 or 3 lanes depending on location, which provision for a fourth. The posted speed limit was to be up to 50 mph (80 km/h).[3][4][5]

The contract to build Stage 1 of the envisaged Woden Parkway, which stretched from Adelaide Avenue to the Carruthers Street interchange, was awarded to Leighton Contractors in May 1966. By this stage, plans required 2 lanes per carriageway to be built instead, with provision for a third. The construction of the roadway required partial closure of Adelaide Avenue, with traffic diverted through existing thoroughfares in nearby suburbs.[5][6]

The second stage of what was now known as Yarra Glen, which stretched from Carruthers Street interchange to Melrose Drive was also built by Leighton Contractors, and completed was opened on 21 December 1967.[7][8]

The final name of Yarra Glen is based upon an early homestead in the area which bore the same name. It was gazetted on 29 September 1966. A spokesman for the Department of the Interior said that the usual roadway suffixes weren't used as the name sounded better without them.[9][10]

Currently, Yarra Glen has not been extended beyond the second stage of the originally envisaged Woden Parkway, with the at-grade Callam Street and Athllon Drive taking the place of further grade-separated construction to the south, neither road connects directly to Yarra Glen. Plans were abandoned for an extension to the north with the nearby Tuggeranong Parkway taking over the function of the originally proposed northern extension, but instead located to the west of Lake Burley Griffin. The roadway still has 2 standard lanes per carriageway, though an additional bus lane has been added along most of the northbound extension. The current posted speed limit is 80 km/h (50 mph).[1][11]

Junctions

District[2]Location[2]km[1]miDestinations[1][2]Notes[1]
Canberra CentralYarralumla, Deakin00.0 Kent Street   Yarralumla, Deakin, Royal Australian Mint, Weston Park, Calvary John James HospitalPartial diamond interchange, No westbound onramp, no eastbound offramp;
Yarra Glen Terminus: continues eastwards as Adelaide Avenue;
ACT Tourist Drive 5 duplex begins, continuing from Adelaide Avenue.
Yarralumla, Deakin0.50.31Cotter Road - Weston Creek, Tuggeranong, Government House, Tidbinbilla Nature ReservePartial semi-directional T interchange, No westbound onramp, no eastbound offramp;
ACT Tourist Drive 5 duplex ends, continues along Cotter Road.
Canberra Central, Woden ValleyDeakin, Curtin, Hughes1.91.2 Carruthers Street   Curtin, Hughes, Royal Australian Mint, Calvary John James HospitalDiamond interchange
Woden ValleyCurtin, Hughes3.01.9 Yamba Drive southeast / Melrose Drive southwest - Woden Town Centre, Tuggeranong, Weston Creek, Canberra HospitalRoundabout, southbound bypass lane to Yamba Drive, northbound bus-only bypass lane from Melrose Drive;
Yarra Glen Terminus: continues southeast and southwest, as Yamba Drive and Melrose Drive respectively.
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
gollark: So he can generate significant quantities of gold and just has to eat somewhat more? Why is gold valuable? How does this even work?
gollark: Your world *is* to be internally consistent || 🐝.
gollark: Quite purple, based on simulations.
gollark: Also, it's irrelevant and just a big number mostly?
gollark: That is *arguably* too many significant figures for my wildly inaccurate calculation but who cares.

See also

 Australian roads portal

References

KML is from Wikidata
  1. Google Maps, Google, Accessed 30 April 2013
  2. ACTMAPi Archived 2 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine, ACT Government, Accessed 30 April 2013
  3. Plans for huge Woden scheme unveiled and associated imagery, The Canberra Times, Page 3, 23 January 1965
  4. SIX LANE TUNNEL PLAN - Highway route to be decided soon, The Canberra Times, Page 3, 6 February 1965
  5. Woden Parkway construction, The Canberra Times, Page 10, 19 September 1966
  6. Diversion for Woden Parkway, The Canberra Times, Page 16, 1 September 1966
  7. Extension to road, The Canberra Times, Page 7, 25 August 1967
  8. Yarra Glen extension, The Canberra Times, Page 4, 21 December 1967
  9. ACT Planning and Land Authority (ACTPLA) - Place name search, ACT Government, Accessed 30 April 2013
  10. WODEN VALLEY HIGHWAY'S OFFICIAL NAME YARRA GLEN, The Canberra Times, Page 1, 30 September 1966
  11. SLIDE OUT OF SEQUENCE, The Canberra Times, Page 3, 27 April 1972
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.