Yarra Bank Highway

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yarra Bank Highway

Power Street, City Road, Alexandra Avenue, Olympic Boulevard

Yarra Bank Highway is located in Melbourne
West end
West end
East end
East end
Coordinates
General information
TypeHighway
Length2.1 km (1.3 mi)[1]
Route number(s) Metro Route 20 (1989–present)
(Southbank–Melbourne)
Former
route number
  • National Route 1 (1988–1999)
  • Metro Route 2 (1965–1989)
    (Southbank–Melbourne)
Tourist routes Tourist Drive 2 (1989–present)
(Southbank–Melbourne)
Major junctions
West end West Gate Freeway
Southbank, Melbourne
 
East end Olympic Boulevard
Melbourne
Highway system

Yarra Bank Highway is a short urban highway in central Melbourne, Australia. It runs parallel to the Yarra River and provides an important alternate route to CityLink's Domain and Burnley Tunnels, used by trucks carrying hazardous loads prohibited from the tunnels, and provides another route when the tunnels are closed for maintenance. Prior to the construction of CityLink, the highway provided the main link between the Monash Freeway and the West Gate Freeway. It is known along its route as Power Street, City Road, Alexandra Avenue and Olympic Boulevard.

Route[edit]

Yarra Bank Highway starts at the intersection of Power and Sturt Streets (southbound) and the West Gate Freeway off-ramp at Power Street (northbound), running north as a five-lane (three northbound, two southbound) single-carriageway road, where it nearly immediately intersects with and changes name to City Road, heading east as a six-lane, dual-carriageway road through the St Kilda Road underpass and the Arts Centre, where it changes name to Alexandra Avenue and narrows to a five-lane (three eastbound, two westbound) single-carriageway road. It intersects with and changes name to Olympic Boulevard and crosses the Yarra River over the Swan Street Bridge, to terminate immediately afterwards at the intersection with Batman Avenue on the river's eastern bank.

History[edit]

With construction starting on the Swan Street Bridge in 1946, traffic levels along Alexandra Avenue were predicted to rise and an underpass underneath St Kilda Road was proposed in 1948,[2] to replace the existing at-grade intersection with City Road; funds were set aside to plan an underpass along Alexandra Avenue in April 1952.[3] The passing of the Melbourne (St Kilda-Road Underpass) Lands Bill 1969[4] through the Parliament of Victoria on 22 April 1969, converted Crown Land in the area to a road reserve, enabling Melbourne and Metropolitan Board of Works (MMBW) to award a A$2 million contract to Leighton Contractors. The Melbourne and Metropolitan Tramways Board installed new tracks along Nolan Street (today Southbank Boulevard) to reach Sturt Street in May 1970 to divert away from the former alignment along City Road where it met the new overpass. Construction on the overpass began in April 1970, and was eventually completed and opened to traffic by the end of 1971. Responsibility for the underpass was transferred from the MMBW to the Country Roads Board on 1 July 1974.[5] The passing of the Melbourne (Snowden Gardens) Land Act 1975 on 2 May 1975[6] allowed the remaining Crown land between the underpass and the Yarra River to be reserved as a site for the Arts Centre Melbourne, with Hamer Hall eventually completed there in 1982.

Yarra Bank Highway (as its constituent roads) was signed as Metropolitan Route 2 along City Road and Alexandra Avenue in 1965; it was replaced by Tourist Drive 2 in 1989. Metropolitan Route 20 was also signed along City Road, Alexandra Avenue and Swan Street (today Olympic Boulevard) in 1989.

The passing of the Transport Act of 1983[7] (itself an evolution from the original Highways and Vehicles Act of 1924[8]) provided for the declaration of State Highways, roads two-thirds financed by the State government through VicRoads. The State Highway (Power Street) and State Highway (City Road) were declared State Highways in May 1993,[9] along Power Street from the ramps from the West Gate Freeway to City Road in Southbank, and then east along City Road to the St Kilda Road underpass at the eastern edge of Southbank. These two highways were fused into one some time later, re-declared the Yarra Bank Highway, and extended east along Alexandra Avenue, across the Yarra River over the Swan Street Bridge, along Batman Avenue to meet the northern end of the South Eastern Arterial, and Brunton Avenue to terminate at Punt Road in September 1994;[10] all roads were known (and signposted) as their constituent parts. This was eventually truncated back to the intersection of Swan Street with Batman Avenue once the CityLink project subsumed the alignment of Batman Avenue in late 1999.

The passing of the Road Management Act 2004[11] granted the responsibility of overall management and development of Victoria's major arterial roads to VicRoads: in 2004, VicRoads declared Yarra Bank Highway (Arterial #6240) beginning at the ramps from the West Gate Freeway in Southbank and ending at Olympic Boulevard in Melbourne,[12] as before, the road is still presently known (and signposted) as its constituent parts.

The western section of Swan Street between Alexandra Avenue and Punt Road was renamed to Olympic Boulevard in November 2006, in tribute to the 1956 Melbourne Olympics.[13]

Major intersections[edit]

Yarra Bank Highway is entirely contained within the City of Melbourne local government area.

Location[1][12]km[1]miDestinationsNotes
Southbank0.00.0Sturt StreetOne way, southbound only
0.10.062 West Gate Freeway (M1 west) – Laverton North, Werribee
CityLink (M1 east) – Kooyong, Chadstone
Westbound and eastbound exits to Power Street northbound only; no access from Power Street southbound to CityLink (Burnley Tunnel) eastbound
Western terminus of highway
0.50.31 City Road (Metro Route 20/Tourist Route 2 west, east) – Werribee, Geelong
Power Street (north) – Southbank
Western terminus of concurrency with Tourist Route 2
Metro Route 20 continues west along City Road
Melbourne1.60.99Linlithgow Avenue, to St Kilda Road (Metro Route 3) – City, St Kilda
1.91.2 Alexandra Parade (Tourist Route 2) – South Yarra, BurnleyNo right turn from Alexandra Parade into Olympic Boulevard eastbound
Eastern terminus of concurrency with Tourist Route 2
Yarra River2.01.2Swan Street Bridge
Melbourne2.11.3Batman AvenueCity, to CityLink (M1 east) – Kooyong, ChadstoneToll incurred heading either direction on Batman Avenue
Olympic Boulevard (Metro Route 20) – Burnley, CamberwellEastern terminus of highway, Metro Route 20 continues east along Olympic Boulevard
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Google (13 November 2021). "Yarra Bank Highway" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Town and Country Planning Board Victoria. Third Annual Report: for the year ended 30 June 1948". Town and Country Planning Board of Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 30 September 1948. pp. 11–2.
  3. ^ "£210,000 Plan for Underpass". The Age. Melbourne: National Library of Australia. 23 April 1952. p. 3. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  4. ^ Melbourne (St Kilda-Road Underpass) Lands Bill 1969
  5. ^ "Country Roads Board Victoria. Sixty-First Annual Report: for the year ended 30 June 1974". Country Roads Board of Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 1 November 1974. p. 4.
  6. ^ Melbourne (Snowden Gardens) Land Act 1975
  7. ^ State of Victoria, An Act to Re-enact with Amendments the Law relating to Transport including the Law with respect to Railways, Roads and Tramways... 23 June 1983
  8. ^ State of Victoria, An Act to make further provision with respect to Highways and Country Roads Motor Cars and Traction Engines and for other purposes 30 December 1924
  9. ^ "Victorian Government Gazette". State Library of Victoria. 13 May 1993. p. 1054. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  10. ^ "Victorian Government Gazette". State Library of Victoria. 8 September 1994. pp. 2411–2. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  11. ^ State Government of Victoria. "Road Management Act 2004" (PDF). Government of Victoria. Archived (PDF) from the original on 18 October 2021. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  12. ^ a b VicRoads. "VicRoads – Register of Public Roads (Part A) 2015". Government of Victoria. p. 964. Archived from the original on 1 May 2020. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  13. ^ City of Melbourne. "PROPOSED RENAMING OF SWAN STREET, MELBOURNE (BETWEEN BATMAN AVENUE AND PUNT ROAD) TO OLYMPIC BOULEVARD" (PDF). melbourne.vic.gov.au. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 August 2008. Retrieved 9 July 2008.

See also[edit]

icon Australian roads portal