Summerland Way
Summerland Way | |
---|---|
Summerland Way's northern end at the NSW/QLD border | |
Coordinates | |
General information | |
Type | Rural road |
Length | 199 km (124 mi)[1] |
Gazetted | August 1928[2] |
Route number(s) | B91 (2013–present) |
Former route number | State Route 91 (1974–2013) |
Major junctions | |
North end | Mount Lindesay Highway NSW/QLD border |
Bruxner Highway | |
South end | Big River Way South Grafton, New South Wales |
Location(s) | |
Major settlements | Kyogle, Casino, Grafton |
Summerland Way is a 199–kilometre state route, designated B91, in New South Wales. It runs generally north from Grafton to the state border with Queensland just west of Mount Lindesay, and continues from there into Queensland as Mount Lindesay Highway. It was named as the region in runs through is a popular tourist area for people during summer.
Summerland Way is an alternative route to Pacific Highway. It is sealed for its entire length, although some of the road north of Lions Road turn-off is narrow and winding.
Route
Summerland Way starts south of the Queensland border to Woodenbong, then heads in a southerly direction through Kyolge, Casino, and Whiporie to eventually reach Grafton on the Clarence River.
Summerland Way crossed the river over the original Grafton Bridge, but now does so over the Balun Bindarray Bridge since its opening in 2019.[3][4]
History
The passing of the Main Roads Act of 1924[5] through the Parliament of New South Wales provided for the declaration of Main Roads, roads partially funded by the State government through the Main Roads Board (MRB, later Transport for NSW). Great Northern Highway was declared (as Main Road No. 9) from near Woodenbong to the state border with Queensland (and continuing southwest via Tenterfield, Glen Innes, Tamworth, Singleton, Newcastle, Gosford, Peat's Ferry and Hornsby to North Sydney),[2] Main Road No. 140 was declared from the intersection with Great Northern Highway near Woodenbong, via Kyogle to the intersection with Tenterfield-Lismore Road (today Bruxner Highway) at Casino,[2] and Main Road No. 151 was declared from Casino via Myrtle Creek to the intersection with Gwydir Highway at South Grafton,[2] on the same day, 8 August 1928. With the passing of the Main Roads (Amendment) Act of 1929[6] to provide for additional declarations of State Highways and Trunk Roads, these were amended to State Highway 9 and Main Roads 140 and 151 on 8 April 1929. Great Northern Highway was renamed New England Highway through New South Wales on 14 March 1933[7][8] (continuing southwest via Tenterfield, Glen Innes, Tamworth and Singleton to Hexham). The southern end of Main Road 151 was later extended from South Grafton via Glenreagh to the jetty at Coffs Harbour on 16 March 1938.[9] Trunk Road 83 was declared on 20 July 1949, from the intersection with New England Highway near Woodenbong, via Kyogle, Casino, Myrtle Creek and Grafton to the intersection with Gwydir Highway in South Grafton, subsuming Main Road 140 and the alignment of Main Road 151 between Casino and South Grafton; Main Road 151 was truncated at South Grafton as a result.[10]
New England Highway was re-routed through Warwick and Cunninghams Gap in Queensland on 11 August 1954.[11][12] Against the wishes of the Beaudesert Shire Council and the Woodenbong Chamber of Commerce,[13] the former alignment of New England Highway from Tenterfield through Beaudesert to Brisbane was re-declared Mount Lindesay Highway,[11][12] after Mount Lindesay, the residue of a solidified magma core, that is part of the Mount Warning volcanic area and is situated in the western extreme of Border Ranges National Park. The Department of Main Roads (which had succeeded the MRB in 1932), declared the New South Wales section as State Highway 24, from Woodenbong to the state border with Queensland (and continuing southwest via Legume to Tenterfield).[11]
Trunk Road 83 was officially named Summerland Way on 10 April 1974.[14]
The New South Wales section of Mount Lindesay Highway, which still included unsealed portions, was eventually de-gazetted as a highway by the Department of Main Roads on 23 December 1981[15] due to very low traffic volumes, it was renamed Mount Lindesay Road and re-declared as Main Road 622.[15] Summerland Way was consequently extended north 9.4 km along the alignment of the former highway to meet the Queensland end of Mount Lindesay Highway at the state border, and the eastern end of Mount Lindesay Road was truncated at the intersection with Summerland Way just east of Woodenbong.[15]
The passing of the Roads Act of 1993[16] updated road classifications and the way they could be declared within New South Wales. Under this act, when Pacific Highway's Grafton bypass opened in May 2020, Summerland Way (as Main Road 83) was officially extended south along the old alignment of Pacific Highway on 5 July 2022,[17] although the road is known locally and sign-posted as Big River Way. Summerland Way today, as part of Main Road 83, still retains this declaration.[18]
In 1996, the Federal Government committed $20 million toward upgrading the Summerland Way. A $7 million contract to realign 1.2 km at Dourrigan's Gap, approximately 16 km north of Kyogle, was awarded, with work starting in February 2002 and expected to take 12 months to complete.[19]
Summerland Way was signed State Route 91 across its entire length in 1974. With the conversion to the newer alphanumeric system in 2013, this was replaced with route B91.[20]
Grafton
European settlement along the Clarence River had reached the area where Grafton now stands in the 1830s, with a store and shipyard being established at South Grafton in 1839. By the early 1840s there was a wharf, a store and an inn on the northern bank of the river.[21]
Prior to 1861, when a punt service began operating on the river, the only way to cross was by rowboat. A steam-driven vehicular ferry began operating in the mid-1860s.[21] This increased the need for a reliable road to areas north of Grafton.
By 1905 the Casino to North Grafton section of the North Coast railway line had been completed, but there was no rail connection to the south until 1915, when the North Coast railway line reached South Grafton and services were connected by a rail ferry that transported railcars across the river.[22]
In 1932, a bridge across the Clarence River with a unique design of two storeys with the railway running underneath the road, known as Grafton Bridge, was opened.[21] This led to a further increase in motor vehicle traffic to the north, and to a need for road improvements.
In December 2019, the New Grafton Bridge (now Balun Bindarray Bridge) opened and runs parallel to the original bridge. Summerland Way was permanently rerouted via Villers Street, Pound Street and Shirley Adams Way over the Balun Bindarray Bridge, and no longer runs along Prince, Fitzroy, Craig and Bent Streets.[3] The new route bypasses the Grafton city centre and avoids the low 3.5m clearance rail bridge over Prince Street. When the Pacific Highway through Grafton was bypassed in May 2020, the B91 route (but not Summerland Way) was further extended along the old Pacific Highway (now Big River Way) and interchange with Pacific Highway at Glenugie.[4]
Mount Lindesay
In 1928, Great Northern Highway was declared, although part of it had not yet been built. Construction of the “missing link” between Woodenbong and Mount Lindesay was completed in 1929, and a section west of Woodenbong was reconstructed by 1934.[23]
In 1935 the Summerland Way was constructed between Casino and the recently completed highway. During World War II the road was improved as an inland, flood-free route to Brisbane which avoided the problems associated with the Clarence River and its two ferry crossings.[24]
Kyogle
In the 1830s a huge property, known as “Richmond Head”, was established in the upper Richmond River valley. The area around what is now Kyogle was settled throughout the 1840s and 1850s, but the name “Kyogle” was not used before 1899. In the 1860s cedar cutters arrived and for the next thirty years tree felling and sawmilling were the district's most important industries.[24] These industries made roads to where they worked, substantially contributing to the road network of the district.
Road access from Casino was facilitated by the opening of the bridge at Casino in 1876. The road was the only means of travel to Casino until 1910, when the railway reached Kyogle.[24]
Casino
European settlement along the Richmond River had reached the area where Casino now stands in the early 1850s, when a village known as “The Falls” was established on the northern side. In 1876 a bridge across the Richmond River to the settlement was completed, enabling road access from Grafton in the south and on to Kyogle in the north. The road was the only means of travel to Grafton until 1905, when the railway reached the town.[25]
Major intersections
State | LGA | Location | km[1] | mi | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Queensland | Scenic Rim | Mount Lindesay–Mount Barney boundary | 0.0 | 0.0 | Mount Lindesay Highway (National Route 13) – Rathdowney, Beaudesert, Brisbane | Southern terminus of Mount Lindesay Highway and National Route 13 |
State border | Queensland – New South Wales state border | |||||
New South Wales | Kyogle | Lindesay Creek–Dairy Flat boundary | Summerland Way (B91) | Northern terminus of Summerland Way and route B91 | ||
9.4 | 5.8 | Mount Lindesay Road – Woodenbong, Tenterfield | T-intersection | |||
The Risk | 45.3 | 28.1 | Gradys Creek Road, to Lions Road – Loadstone, Rathdowney | |||
Richmond River | 49.6 | 30.8 | Jenny Constable Bridge[26] Road follows upper reaches of Richmond River, crossing it five more times | |||
Kyogle | Wiangaree | 51.3 | 31.9 | North Coast railway line | ||
Kilgra | 55.8 | 34.7 | ||||
Kyogle | 63.5 | 39.5 | ||||
64.0 | 39.8 | Kyogle Road – Murwillumbah | ||||
65.5 | 40.7 | North Coast railway line | ||||
Richmond Valley | Casino | 90.0 | 55.9 | |||
93.8 | 58.3 | Murwillumbah railway line | ||||
94.2 | 58.5 | West Street (south) – Casino | T junction | |||
94.4 | 58.7 | Johnson Street (Bruxner Highway) (B60 east) – Lismore Centre Street (north) – Casino, Ballina | Northern terminus of concurrency with route B60 at roundabout | |||
Richmond River | 95.5 | 59.3 | Irving Bridge[27] | |||
Richmond Valley | Casino | 95.9 | 59.6 | Hare Street (Bruxner Highway) (B60 west) – Mummulgum, Tenterfield Hare Street (Casino-Coraki Road) (east) – Tatham, Coraki | Southern terminus of concurrency with route B60 at roundabout | |
Clarence Valley | Whiporie | 148.9 | 92.5 | North Coast railway line | ||
Banyabba | 158.4 | 98.4 | Pringles Way – Lawrence | |||
Mountain View | 185.5 | 115.3 | Clarence Way – Copmanhurst | |||
Koolkhan | 187.2 | 116.3 | North Coast railway line | |||
Grafton | 194.1 | 120.6 | Turf Street – Grafton | T junction | ||
195.2 | 121.3 | Prince Street (northeast) – Grafton Dobie Street (southeast) – Grafton | Roundabout | |||
196.0 | 121.8 | North Coast railway line | ||||
196.1 | 121.9 | Pound Street (northwest) – Grafton Prince Street (southwest) – Grafton | Roundabout | |||
196.9 | 122.3 | North Coast railway line | ||||
Clarence River | 197.4– 197.8 | 122.7– 122.9 | Balun Bindarray Bridge | |||
Clarence Valley | South Grafton | 198.6 | 123.4 | Big River Way (B76 east, B76/B91 south) – Tyndale, Glenugie to Pacific Highway (A1) – Brisbane, Coffs Harbour, Newcastle, Sydney to Gwydir Highway (B76) – Glen Innes, Moree, Walgett | Southern terminus of Summerland Way at roundabout Route B91 continues southwards along Big River Way | |
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
|
See also
References
- ^ a b "Summerland Way" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved 17 August 2022.
- ^ a b c d "Main Roads Act, 1924-1927". Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. No. 110. National Library of Australia. 17 August 1928. pp. 3814–20. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
- ^ a b "New Grafton Bridge - Proposed directional signage plan - Stage 2 - Bridge opening (Target Opening Date - December 2019)" (PDF). Transport for NSW - Roads and Maritime. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
- ^ a b "New Grafton Bridge - Proposed directional signage plan - Stage 3 - Project completion (Target Date - June 2020)" (PDF). Transport for NSW - Roads and Maritime. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
- ^ State of New South Wales, An Act to provide for the better construction, maintenance, and financing of main roads; to provide for developmental roads; to constitute a Main Roads Board Archived 11 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine 10 November 1924
- ^ State of New South Wales, An Act to amend the Main Roads Act, 1924-1927; to confer certain further powers upon the Main Roads Board; to amend the Local Government Act, 1919, and certain other Acts; to validate certain payments and other matters; and for purposes connected therewith. Archived 12 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine 8 April 1929
- ^ "Main Roads Act, 1924-1931". Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. No. 47. National Library of Australia. 24 March 1933. p. 1093. Archived from the original on 19 September 2022. Retrieved 19 September 2022.
- ^ "New England Highway". Uralla Times. National Library of Australia. 23 February 1933. p. 11. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
- ^ "Main Roads Act, 1924-1937". Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. No. 46. National Library of Australia. 25 March 1938. p. 1222. Archived from the original on 1 December 2022. Retrieved 1 December 2022.
- ^ "Main Roads Act, 1924-1949". Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. No. 152. National Library of Australia. 12 August 1949. p. 2304. Archived from the original on 1 December 2022. Retrieved 1 December 2022.
- ^ a b c "Main Roads Act, 1924-1954". Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. No. 140. National Library of Australia. 3 September 1954. p. 2694. Archived from the original on 19 September 2022. Retrieved 19 September 2022.
- ^ a b ""New England" Highway now via Warwick". Warwick Daily News. National Library of Australia. 9 November 1954. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
- ^ "New England Highway: Council against change of name". Beaudesert Times. National Library of Australia. 21 May 1954. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
- ^ "Main Roads Act, 1924-1974". Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. No. 48. National Library of Australia. 26 April 1974. p. 1506. Archived from the original on 1 December 2022. Retrieved 1 December 2022.
- ^ a b c "Main Roads Act, 1924". Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. No. 23. National Library of Australia. 12 February 1982. pp. 605–6. Archived from the original on 19 September 2022. Retrieved 19 September 2022.
- ^ State of New South Wales, An Act to make provision with respect to the roads of New South Wales; to repeal the State Roads Act 1986, the Crown and Other Roads Act 1990 and certain other enactments; and for other purposes. Archived 11 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine 10 November 1924
- ^ "Roads Act 1993" (PDF). Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. No. 323. Legislation NSW. 15 July 2022. pp. 3–9. Archived (PDF) from the original on 1 December 2022. Retrieved 1 December 2022.
- ^ Transport for NSW (August 2022). "Schedule of Classified Roads and Unclassified Regional Roads" (PDF). Government of New South Wales. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
- ^ "Federal Government keeps New South Wales moving - Attachment - Summerland Way". Australian Government. 14 May 2002. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
- ^ "Road number and name changes in NSW" (PDF). Roads & Maritime Services. Government of New South Wales. 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 March 2016. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
- ^ a b c "Grafton, NSW". Aussie Towns. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
- ^ "Grafton City Station (South Grafton)". NSWrail.net. NSW Rail. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
- ^ "Mount Lindesay Highway, NSW". Ozroads. Retrieved 11 January 2018.[self-published source]
- ^ a b c "Kyogle, NSW". Aussie Towns. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
- ^ "Casino, NSW". Aussie Towns. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
- ^ "Kyogle Tourist Drive Number 2" (PDF). Kyogle Council. Retrieved 8 January 2018.
- ^ "Irving Bridge". Geocaching. 25 October 2017. Retrieved 8 January 2018.