North Western Expressway

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The North West Freeway was a planned freeway route in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, intended to link the Sydney CBD to its north-western suburbs, and ultimately the F3 Freeway to Newcastle.

The route was planned as early as 1962 (even providing a proposed freeway "dotted line" in the first UBD street directory of 1964), with the section from Fig Tree Bridge to Gladesville Bridge and the Western Distributor being the only completed sections. Anti-freeway protests, driven by vocal heritage concerns in the Annandale/Glebe area from 1972 to 1977, led the Wran Government to cancel the project in 1977, as a part of a change in government policy regarding freeways.[1]

[edit] Route

The original route was to start at the Western Distributor, connecting to Gladesville Bridge via a new elevated freeway.

The section of freeway from Gladesville Bridge to Fig Tree Bridge at Hunters Hill was completed in 1965 with the opening of Tarban Creek Bridge.

The route from there to approximately the intersection of Delhi Road and Epping Road was shown on a 1984 Department of Main Roads map, but was removed by 1988 when that map was reprinted.

The M2 Hills Motorway follows the originally planned route from Epping Road to Seven Hills.

The Westlink M7 continues along the original route from the M2 to Dean Park, where the M7 turns south while the North West Freeway corridor continues west.

The unused but still reserved corridor passes north of suburbs including Shalvey and Willmot, continuing west past Llandilo to stop abruptly near Londonderry at the foot of the Blue Mountains.

The Lane Cove Valley Expressway was intended to fork from this route and pass through the Lane Cove Valley area to connect to the Sydney-Newcastle Freeway.

[edit] References and external links

  1. ^ Ozroads: The Australian Roads Website