Highway 1 (Victoria) Explained

Type:highway
Road Name:Highway 1
State:vic
Location:Highway 1 (Victoria) route map.png
Loc Caption:Map of Victoria with Highway 1 highlighted in red
Length:958
Direction A:VIC/NSW border
Direction B:VIC/SA border
End A:near Genoa
End B:near Dartmoor
Est:1955
Through:Orbost, Bairnsdale Sale, Traralgon Warragul, Melbourne, Geelong, Camperdown, Warrnambool, Portland

In Victoria, Highway 1 is a 958km (595miles) long route that follows the coastline of the state, from the New South Wales border near Genoa to the South Australian border near Dartmoor. Highway 1 continues around the rest of Australia, joining all mainland state capitals, and connecting major centres in Tasmania. All roads within the Highway 1 system are allocated a road route numbered 1, M1, A1, or B1, depending on the state route numbering system. In Victoria, the highway is designated as route M1 between Traralgon and Winchelsea, and route A1 elsewhere.

History

Highway 1 was created as part of the National Route Numbering system, adopted in 1955. The route was compiled from an existing network of state and local roads and tracks.[1]

Route description

The Victorian section of Highway 1 travels south from the New South Wales border to Morwell as the Princes Highway. The highway then becomes the M1 motorway, following the Princes Freeway to the Melbourne suburb of Berwick, and then the Monash Freeway to central Melbourne. Highway 1, as the CityLink Tollway bypasses the actual city centre, connecting to the West Gate Freeway. Beyond the Western Ring Road interchange, the route is once again named Princes Freeway, which leads to Geelong, with the dual carriageway M1 ending in Winchelsea. Highway 1 continues, designated as A1, along the rest of the Princes Highway, through to the South Australian border, west of Dartmoor.

The following sections, which are freeways or dual carriageways, are designated as route M1:

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Taylor, David. The Highway One travel companion. Volume 1, Melbourne to Tweed Heads. 2012. Boolarong Press. Salisbury, Queensland. 9780987218902. 9. 22 March 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20161006035630/http://highwayone.net.au/. 6 October 2016. dead.
  2. The M1 Upgrade http://www.mcwupgrade.com.au/ is mid-way through re-construction.
  3. Web site: Melbourne’s M1 freeway upgrade and SUNA Traffic Channel win ITS Australia Awards . 17 January 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120304150451/http://www.its-australia.com.au/Main/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=hPzT%2fC5hZVk=&tabid=36&language=en-AU . 4 March 2012 . dead .