Townsville Ring Road

The Townsville Ring Road, is a major road in Townsville, Queensland. The road has been constructed as the new A1/M1 (Bruce Highway) Route that bypasses the inner metro area of Townsville, Australia. The road was built in 4 stages with the first three stages built as a two-laned main road. The First Stage, The Douglas Arterial Road, opened in April 2005.[1] The fourth stage involved duplication of the first three stages of the project and an additional four-lane link between the third stage to the Bruce Highway to the north-west of Townsville.

Stage Two and Three

On the 24 October 2006, Surveying for the Hervey Range Road Interchange had started, with construction on the interchange commencing during April 2007. Completion on the next two stages of the project was expected for mid/late-2008. Once these stages are complete, the road will officially be designated as the (A1) or National Highway 1 at the moment of opening, and in the long-term (after 2015), after duplication of the entire project (including construction of the Bohle plains Extension), the road will be designated as the M1.[2]

Stages two and three were completed in April 2009, while the Bohle extension was completed in December 2016. The original plan of duplication of stage two and three was postponed to a later date, and was not included in stage four.

Stages of the Ring Road

Stage 1, Douglas Arterial Road, a 2-lane single carriageway prior to 2012, is now a divided 4-lane road with 100 km/h speed limit.[3] Stage 2, Condon Bypass, is a 2-lane single carriageway road with 100 km/h speed limit.[4] Stage 3, Shaws Road Extension, is a 2-lane, single carriageway road with 100 km/h speed limit.[5] Stage 4, Boyle Plains Extension (completed December 2016), is a 4-lane Motorway Road with 100 km/h speed limit. Duplication of all stages to 4-lane Motorway Standard is planned.[6]

Douglas Arterial Road

The Douglas Arterial Road is a four-lane motorway located in Townsville, Queensland. The road is commonly known by locals as either the Ring Road (which is the name the project goes under) or the Douglas Motorway. The road was the first stage of the Townsville Ring Road which is the future National Highway route through Townsville.

The 5.6 kilometres (3.5 mi) Douglas Arterial features two newly constructed dual carriageways being separated by concrete barriers built in 2012. It also features a six-lane, 250 metre bridge across the Ross River and Riverway Drive which was constructed upstream of the existing Vickers Bridge named after the famous vickers family, along with a two-lane bridge over Discovery Drive and University Creek. The grade-separated interchanges at University Road and Angus Smith Drive were also duplicated.

As with the existing Douglas section, the arterial comprises two 3.5 metre-wide lanes with two 2 metre-wide shoulders (a total of 11 metres wide). It is built as a motorway with a speed limit of 100 km/h and the usual restrictions (no mopeds, animals, farm vehicles, cyclists or pedestrians) will apply. New exits and entry ramps were constructed on the Riverside Boulevard overpass connecting the suburb to the Arterial thus reducing travel time for people living in the area in having to connect via Angus Smith Drive.

The road cuts travelling times between the suburbs of Condon and Douglas (and subsequently the Townsville Hospital and James Cook University which are located in Douglas), by potentially 30 minutes. The old route to Douglas via Riverway Drive and Ross River Rd went through multiple sets of traffic lights, and was, in peak traffic, a 35-minute drive from Condon, but with the Douglas Arterial open, the trip now only takes close to four minutes. However, in practice, due to congestion at the on and off ramps/traffic lights at peak times, the time saving is closer to 15 minutes. The speed limit on the road is 100 km/h.

Stage 2 and 3 are now complete. The road beyond the Douglas stretch - the Townsville Ring Road is a single carriageway and has now been designated at the A1, bypassing Townsville.

Major intersections

The table of major intersections on the Bruce Highway includes those on the Townsville Ring Road.

See also

References

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