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Port Road, Adelaide

Road in Adelaide, Australia

Port Road, Adelaide

Summary

Road in Adelaide, Australia

FieldValue
typeroad
road_namePort Road
statesa
imageOIC port road zoom towards cbd.jpg
captionLooking towards the Adelaide city centre from Port Road in Hindmarsh
cityAdelaide
urbanyes
length12.0
length_ref
route{{plainlist
formerA21 (1998–2017)
(Adelaide–Thebarton)
direction_aSoutheast
direction_bNorthwest
coordinates_a
coordinates_b
alternative_location_mapnomap
end_aNorth Terrace
West Terrace
Adelaide
end_bSt Vincent Street
Port Adelaide, Adelaide
exits{{plainlist
regionEastern Adelaide, Western Adelaide
through,
  • R1 (2017–present) (through Thebarton)
  • A7 (1998–present) (Hindmarsh–Port Adelaide) (Adelaide–Thebarton) West Terrace Adelaide Port Adelaide, Adelaide
  • Park Terrace
  • North–South Motorway
  • East Avenue
  • Tapleys Hill Road
  • Grand Junction Road}} Port Road (and its northern section as Commercial Road through Port Adelaide) is a major road in Adelaide, South Australia connecting the Adelaide city centre with Port Adelaide. It is 12 km long, and is designated part of route R1 within central Adelaide, and beyond as route A7.

Route

Southbound on the North-South Motorway, under Port Road bridge

Port Road starts at the north-western corner of the Adelaide city centre, at the intersection of North Terrace and West Terrace, and heads northwest, turning north at Thebarton to become part of the City Ring Route, before meeting Park Terrace at Hindmarsh and heading northwest again with its widened median, crossing the North-South Motorway and heading through the suburbs of Woodville and Cheltenham, before it turns northwards at Alberton to cross Grand Junction Road, changing name to Commercial Road and terminating not long afterwards in the centre of Port Adelaide.

History

The road includes a very wide median strip, giving a total width of approximately 70 metres. The original design was conceived soon after the establishment of Adelaide, was to accommodate a standard road and a canal, with the canal later replaced in the plans by a railway line. The canal and railway line were never created in the road allotment: the railway line when built in 1853 was built approximately 1 km to the east. Since the extension of the Glenelg tram line in 2009–10, 200 metres of median strip at the city end is occupied by tram lines.

Location of Port Road in Adelaide.

In the 1968 Metropolitan Adelaide Transport Study (MATS plan), the road was destined to be upgraded to become the Port Freeway. The plan fell through, yet in 2005 the Government of South Australia announced a 600 m tunnel for South Road below Port Road and the railway line. The Torrens Road to River Torrens project to upgrade South Road to include a free-flowing road in a trench under Port Road and several other intersections started construction in 2015 and was completed by the end of 2018.

Some routes in Adelaide were renumbered in 2017. Port Road had been designated route A21 (city ring route) between West Terrace and Park Terrace. After the change, the West Terrace end is not numbered, and it bears route R1 (city ring route) between James Congdon Drive and Park Terrace.

Major intersections

West Terrace (south) – Adelaide CBD Adam Street (west) Southeastern terminus of route A7 West Lakes Boulevard (southwest), Football Park

References

References

  1. "Port Road".
  2. "Location SA Map viewer with regional layers". [[Government of South Australia]].
  3. (2003). "2003 Adelaide Street Directory, 41st Edition". UBD (A Division of Universal Press Pty Ltd).
  4. [https://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-11-02/was-there-ever-going-to-be-a-canal-on-port-road/10308100 Was there ever going to be a canal on Port Road and is that why it is so wide?], [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation. ABC]], 2 November 2018
  5. (5 August 2015). "North-South Corridor: Torrens Road to River Torrens". Department of Planning, Transport and Infrastructure, Government of South Australia.
  6. (31 July 2015). "T2T". T2T Alliance.
  7. "Location SA Map viewer with LGA layers". [[Government of South Australia]].
  8. "Location SA Map viewer with suburb layers". [[Government of South Australia]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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