Bruxner Highway

Bruxner Highway
New South Wales
The Bruxner Highway at Drake.
General information
Type Highway
Length 420 km (261 mi)[1]
Route number(s)
Former
route number
Major junctions
West end
 
East end
Location(s)
Major settlements
Highway system
Highways in Australia
National HighwayFreeways in Australia
Highways in New South Wales

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The Bruxner Highway is a 420-kilometre (260 mi)[1]state highway located in New South Wales, Australia. The highway forms an east-west link from the Northern Rivers coast, across the Northern Tablelands in northern New South Wales, close to the border with Queensland.

The highway was named on 2 November 1959 in honour of Sir Michael Bruxner, member for Northern Tablelands and Tenterfield from 1920 to 1962, leader of the New South Wales Country Party for almost all that period and Deputy Premier and Minister for Transport from 1932 to 1941.[2][3]

Route

The eastern terminus of the Bruxner Highway[4] is at the junction with the Pacific Highway at Ballina and links Lismore, Casino, Mummulgum, Drake, Tenterfield, Bonshaw and Boggabilla where its western terminus is at a junction with the Newell Highway.

This state based road forms an important link between Ballina and Casino via Lismore. At Alstonville (near Ballina), a $90 million bypass has been allocated from the Federal Government at the cost of funds from the National Highway scheme. There is a proposed dual carriageway between Ballina (Teven Interchange) and Casino which upgrades the Alstonville Bypass and a new alignment from near Wollongbar Tafe and bypasses Goonellabah, Lismore and joins up to the existing Bruxner Highway at Clovass near Casino and dual carriageway until the built up area in Casino. The upgrade will name the route Bruxner Motorway (M60) also known as Northern Rivers Expressway. Further west from Tenterfield and the Bruxner Highway runs parallel and close to the Dumaresq River along with the Queensland border to Goondiwindi via Boggabilla and the Newell Highway.

National Route 44 was only signposted from the Pacific Highway near Ballina to the New England Highway in Tenterfield. It was intended that National Route 44 continued to Boggabilla to meet with the Newell Highway, however primarily because the highway is administered by the local government, as well as a short 4 km unsealed section between Yetman and Boggabilla, which goes against the route numbering protocol to not sign routes on unsealed roads, this part of the highway was never signed as National Route 44.

In 2013, as part of the alphanumeric route scheme, B60 replaced National Route 44 between Ballina and Tenterfield.[5]

Major intersections

LGALocationkm[1]miDestinationsNotes
Moree PlainsBoggabilla00.0 Newell Highway (A39)  Moree, GoondiwindiWestern highway terminus, continues north as Newell Highway
7.94.9Boggabilla–Warialda Road  North Star, Warialda
InverellYetman60.437.5 Warialda Road (B95)   Warialda, Inverell
Texas10163Texas Road  Texas
Bonshaw13081Inverell–Bonshaw Road  Ashford, Inverell
TenterfieldTenterfield230140 New England Highway (A15 / B60 south)  Warwick, TenterfieldEastbound traffic continues south on New England Highway
Gap in route
TenterfieldTenterfield235146 New England Highway (A15 / B60 north)  Glen Innes, Bonshaw, WarwickWestbound traffic continues north on New England Highway
Clarence River306190Tabulam Bridge
KyogleTabulam314195Clarence Way  Baryulgil, Grafton
Richmond ValleyCasino361224 Summerland Way (B91) south  GraftonB91 southern concurrency terminus; roundabout
Richmond River362225Irving Bridge
Richmond ValleyCasino363226 Summerland Way (B91) west  Kyogle, WoodenbongB91 northern concurrency terminus; roundabout
LismoreSouth Lismore391243Union Street north / Elliot Road west  Kyogle, NimbinRoundabout
Wilsons River392244Bridge over river
LismoreLismore393244 Dawson Street to Bangalow Road (B62)  Clunes, Bangalow, Byron BayRoundabout
BallinaWest Ballina420260 Pacific Highway (A1)  Ballina, Gold Coast, Brisbane, Grafton, Coffs Harbour, SydneyRoundabout interchange; eastern highway terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Google (2 June 2014). "Bruxner Highway" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 2 June 2014.
  2. Aitkin, Don. "Bruxner, Sir Michael Frederick (1882 - 1970)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Australian National University. Retrieved 5 April 2007.
  3. "The Bruxner Highway" (PDF). Main Roads. Deparmtent of Main Roads, Government of New South Wales: 59–68. March 1968. Retrieved 6 November 2016.
  4. "Bruxner Highway". Ozroads: the Australian Roads Website. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
  5. "Road number and name changes in NSW" (PDF). Roads & Maritime Services. Government of New South Wales. 2012. Retrieved 7 November 2016.

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