James Ruse Drive
James Ruse Drive New South Wales | |
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James Ruse Drive Bridge over the Parramatta River | |
General information | |
Type | Highway |
Route number(s) | |
Former route number |
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Major junctions | |
North end | |
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South end | |
Location(s) | |
Major settlements | Clyde, Rosehill, Parramatta, North Parramatta, Northmead |
Highway system | |
Highways in Australia National Highway • Freeways in Australia Highways in New South Wales |
James Ruse Drive is a main thoroughfare route around Parramatta, in Western Sydney. It stretches from Windsor Road, Northmead in the north to Great Western Highway (Parramatta Road), Granville in the south. It passes through six large interchanges, with Windsor Road, Pennant Hills Road, Kissing Point Road, Victoria Road, the M4 Western Motorway and the Great Western Highway. It was named in 1979 together with the completion of the road. It has been allocated several route numbers, as follows: State route 53 (entire length from 1977-1988),[1] State Route 77 (Cumberland Highway 1988-1993), State route 55 (south of Cumberland Highway from 1988-2004), Metroad 7 (replaced SR77 from 1993-2005),[2] State route 40 (north of Victoria Road 2008/9-2013) and A40 (replaces SR40 2013- ).[3]
The formerly Metroad 7 section of James Ruse Drive was commissioned A28 in May 2013 and will duplex with the newly commissioned A40.
The road is named after James Ruse, a convict who was given land in the Parramatta district, which he successfully developed into the colony's first sustainable farm. The original Experiment Farm Cottage still exists on Ruse Street, Parramatta.
See also
Australian Roads portal
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Former NSW State Route 53, Ozroads, Retrieved on 9 June 2013.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Metroad 7, Ozroads, Retrieved on 9 June 2013.
- ↑ James Ruse Drive, Ozroads. Retrieved on 14 May 2013.