The present highway network in New South Wales, Australia was established in August 1928 when the Country Roads Board (the predecessor of the Department of Main Roads and the Roads and Traffic Authority) superseded the 1924 main road classifications and established the basis of the existing New South Wales (NSW) main road system. (the full list of main roads gazetted appears in the NSW Government Gazette of 17 August 1928). The number of a road for administrative purposes is not the same as the route number it carries eg. the Great Western Highway is state highway 5 for administrative purposes but is signposted as part of national route 32.)
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While highways in many other countries are typically identified by number, highways in Australia, including New South Wales, are known mostly by names. These names typically come from 19th-century explorers, important politicians or geographic regions.
The highest class of highway in Australia are the federally funded National Highways that connect capital cities. National highways in New South Wales include the Hume Highway between Sydney and Melbourne, the New England Highway between Newcastle and Brisbane, the Newell Highway from Brisbane towards Melbourne, and the Federal and Barton Highways, which link Canberra to the Hume.
National route numbers have been allocated to NSW highways since 1955. National Route 1 ('Highway 1') is one of the best known numbered national routes, likely because of its fame for circumnavigating the continent. National Highway 31, the Hume Highway, is another relatively well-known route number. The insignia of national routes is a five-sided black and white shield, chosen as it is the shape of the Australian national coat of arms. National highways use the same shield, except for their green and gold colour and the word 'national' added across the top.
To supplement the national route number system, three ring roads were introduced to Sydney in 1964.[1] These were numbered 1, 3 and 5, with relatively (but not proportionately) increasing radii. While they were officially decommissioned in 1974, some old ring road 3 signs remained posted into the 1980s, and ring road 1 signs into the 1990s.
In 1973, a system of freeway numbering was introduced to the state to complement the national routes and ring roads. The shields were replicas of the red, white and blue U.S. Interstate Highway shields, and were numbered F1 to F8. The F1 was the Warringah Freeway, the F2 reserved for the Castlereagh Freeway, a corridor similar to today's M2 Hills Motorway, the F3 is the Sydney Newcastle Freeway, the F4 was the western part of today's M4 Western Motorway (formerly Western Freeway), the F5 was the freeway section of National Highway 31, the F6 is the Southern Freeway, the F7 was reserved for a corridor similar to today's Cahill Expressway, Eastern Distributor and Bondi Junction Bypass and the F8 was a section of Wollongong's Northern Distributor,[2] now part of State Route 60. Most of these routes were replaced with other numbers over the decades, and by 1990s, only the F1, F3 and F6 were still marked as such, with simpler, green-on-white shields. None of these shields remain, but the F3 and F6 are still usually called by those names.
In 1974, the three ring roads, 1, 3 and 5, were decommissioned and replaced by new State Routes, which had the same shields as the new freeways but without the red crest. Scores of other State Routes were also designated across New South Wales, marking out urban arterial routes and secondary rural highways. They were allocated as follows:
In 1993, Sydney's Metroad system was introduced, with its prominent, blue-on-white hexagonal shields. There were initially six metroads: Metroad 1 replaced National Route 1 within the metropolitan area, Metroad 2 replaced parts of State Routes 28 and 30 (and was subsequently absorbed by the M2 Hills Motorway), Metroad 3 replaced State Route 33 (once Ring Road 3), Metroad 4 replaced the F4 Freeway and the metropolitan part of National Route 32, Metroad 5 replaced part of the metropolitan part of National Highway 31 and Metroad 7 replaced State Route 77. Later, Metroad 6 replaced State Route 45, Metroad 9 replaced the metropolitan part of State Route 69 and Metroad 10 replaced State Route 14 south of Mona Vale. There was never a Metroad 8.
Currently, the state is preparing to replace its entire system of State Routes, National Routes, National Highways and Metroads with an alphanumeric route numbering system. Instead of shields, the numbers will be on a rectangular background outlined in white. There has as yet been no announcement for when the changeover will take place. All new highway signs have the new alphanumeric route numbers in place but obscured with a covering plate.
Most NSW highways are two-lane, undivided roadways, with relatively few lengths of dual carriageway. Only relatively short lengths of the dual carriageway are true freeways with restricted access points and grade-separated interchanges. Today 90% of the New South Wales section (and 100% of the Victorian section) of the Hume Highway is dual carriageway; 100% of the Hume Highway will be dual carriageway achieved by 2012. Currently, 40% of the Pacific Highway is dual carriageway: it will be 100% dual carriageway by 2016. Dual carriageways are at the following locations; Hexham-south of Bulahdelah (north of Myall Way, construction is underway),[3] Bulahdelah bypass (planning approval granted)[4][5][6][7][8][9] , north of Bulahdelah-Coopernook (north of Coopernook-Herons Creek, construction is underway)[10] and Herons Creek-Port Macquarie,[11] Eungai Deviation 2nd Carriageway,[12] Raleigh Deviation,[13] Bonville Bypass (in construction),[14] Coffs Harbour Bypass (planning) ,[15] Ballina Bypass (pre-construction activities),[16] Bangalow Bypass Duplication[17] and between the Ewingsdale Interchange (Byron Bay exit) to Brisbane[18] (including Tugun Bypass[19] and Banora Point/Sextons Hill (undergoing EIS and SIS)[20]).
New South Wales is slowly preparing to introduce an alpha-numeric route code system - new signs are being fitted with such route numbers with a coverplate carrying the existing route number being fitted over the top. There has been no announcement from the Roads and Traffic Authority of NSW yet as to when this official changeover will take place.