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North–South Motorway

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North-South Motorway

Signage at the interchange of the M2 North South Motorway/A9 Port River Expressway/A13 Salisbury Highway.
Map
General information
TypeMotorway
Length4.8 km (3.0 mi)
Opened13 March 2014
Route number(s) M2[1]
Major junctions
North end Salisbury Highway, Wingfield, Adelaide
 
South end South Road, Regency Park, Adelaide
Location(s)
Major suburbs / townsDry Creek, Wingfield, Angle Park, Regency Park
Highway system

The North-South Motorway (previously known as the South Road Superway)[1] is an elevated motorway in the northern suburbs of the South Australian capital city of Adelaide. It has been constructed over a 4 km section of South Road as part of a long term plan to upgrade this road into a non-stop north-south route. At a cost of A$812 million, the motorway is the biggest single investment in a road project in South Australia’s history.[2] The North-South Motorway is stage two of the North–South Corridor upgrade and delivers a 4.8 kilometre section of freeway grade road, including a 2.8 kilometre elevated roadway, from the Port River Expressway to Regency Road. Along the way, it passes over the Dry Creek-Port Adelaide railway line, Cormack Road, Grand Junction Road and Days Road, with exits at Grand Junction Road and Days Road.

Purpose

The Australian Government, through the Nation Building Program project, committed $500 million and the South Australian Government $432 million to the North–South Corridor over five years. This funding allocation recognised that South Road is the only continuous link between the northern and southern suburbs as well as the spine connecting Adelaide’s major inter-modal transport hubs – Adelaide Airport, Islington Rail Terminal, Port Adelaide and Outer Harbor.[3]

Contracting

South Australian civil engineering and construction company, Bardavcol, was awarded the early works local roads contract, with the design and construction contract awarded to Urban Superway Joint Venture, comprising the John Holland Group, Macmahon Contractors and Leed Engineering & Construction.[4]

Construction

Construction of the local connector roads was completed in early 2011, with the completion of construction of Gallipoli Drive. This road replaced South Road as the main distributor road in the area during construction. Construction of the superway proper commenced in early 2011.[5] Construction was completed March 2014. The southbound lanes opened early February 2014, with the left turn entry from Port River Expressway opening on 31 January 2014.[6] The northbound lanes opened on 13 March 2014.[7]

Exits and interchanges

LGALocationkmmiDestinationsNotes
Port Adelaide EnfieldWingfield00.0 Salisbury Highway (A13) east / Port River Expressway (A9) west  – Port Adelaide, Outer Harbor, SalisburyNorthern terminus: continues as Salisbury Highway to Port Wakefield Road
1.91.2 Grand Junction Road  – Regency Park, Gepps CrossSouthbound exit, Northbound entry only
Regency Park3.42.1 South Road  – Angle Park, Ferryden ParkNorthbound exit, southbound entry only
4.83.0 South Road  – Adelaide CBDSouthern terminus: continues as South Road

See also

icon Australian Roads portal

References

  1. ^ a b Department of Planning, Transport and Infrastructure (13 March 2014). "Use the South Road Superway and save time: Northbound lanes to open on Thursday night" (PDF). Media Release. Government of South Australia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 May 2014. Retrieved 7 May 2014. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ Infrastructure SA (21 May 2010). "South Road Superway: Demography". Retrieved 26 June 2010.
  3. ^ Australian Government (26 June 2010). "Nation Building - Economic Stimulus Plan". Retrieved 26 June 2010.
  4. ^ Infrastructure SA (30 April 2010). "Project Overview: Demography". Retrieved 29 June 2010.
  5. ^ Infrastructure SA (30 April 2010). "Project official webpage". Retrieved 29 June 2010.
  6. ^ Infrastructure SA (30 April 2010). "Project official webpage". Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  7. ^ "South Road Superway". Department of Planning, Transport and Infrastructure. 14 March 2014. Retrieved 1 September 2014.