Tiger Brennan Drive Explained

Road Name:TigerBrennan Drive
Road Name2:Darwin CBD to Palmerston
Type:Road
State:nt
Length:19.1
Route: A15
Direction A:West
End A:McMinn Street, Darwin CBD
Direction B:East
End B:Stuart Highway Interchange, at Yarrawonga near Palmerston
Through:Stuart Park, Woolner, Bayview, Winnellie, Hidden Valley, Berrimah, Pinelands

Tiger Brennan Drive is a major arterial road in the western suburbs of Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia. The road travels southeast–east starting from Darwin CBD toward Darwin's eastern suburb of Berrimah, then continues to a connection with the Stuart Highway at Palmerston. Tiger Brennan Drive runs parallel with the Stuart Highway for most of its length. The road was named after Harold "Tiger" Brennan,[1] a long serving Northern Territory politician and former mayor of Darwin. The road has been assigned the alphanumeric route designation A15 for its entire length.[2]

Overview

Tiger Brennan Drive provides the most direct route for freight coming to and from the East Arm Port, instead of using the busy Stuart Highway which runs through established suburbs. Following the completion of major extension works in 2010, the original sections built as single carriageway in stages between 1987 and 1997 are being progressively upgraded to dual carriageway standard.

Most major junctions on Tiger Brennan Drive are controlled by traffic lights, however the road is designed to be upgraded to freeway standard, with some suburban streets connected via limited access slip roads. Additionally, grade separated junctions are provided at Hidden Valley Road and the interchange with the Stuart Highway. Major roads intersecting Tiger Brennan Drive include Amy Johnson Avenue, Woolner Road, Berrimah Road and Tivendale Road. The road provides the primary access to Charles Darwin National Park.

Tiger Brennan Drive extension

Stage 1 – Construction of the $6.5 million Tiger Brennan Drive extension involving the duplication of Berrimah Road to provide easier access to the East Arm Port and ease traffic congestion on other major arterial roads in the Darwin urban area was completed in 2009.[3]

Stage 2 – Tiger Brennan Drive Extension Stage 2 for the Department of Planning and Infrastructure (DPI) of the Northern Territory Government was completed in 2010. The project comprised the construction of 7.5 km of highway-standard dual carriageway road between Berrimah Road and Palmerston, including a grade-separated interchange with the Stuart Highway at a cost of $95 million. The extension provides an alternative route to reduce travel time for the approximately 34,000 vehicles then travelling the Darwin to Palmerston corridor daily. The total construction cost of both stages was approximately $127 million.[4]

Further upgrades

In late 2012, work commenced on further upgrades to widen the 12 km section between McMinn Street in the Darwin CBD and Berrimah Road to four lane dual carriageway standard. The funding for this project was provided once again by cooperation between the Federal and Territory governments at an approximate cost of $100 million.[5]

In November 2023, construction began to raise Berrimah Road over Tiger Brennan Drive, a busy intersection that handles a high volume of heavy vehicle traffic. These works were expected to be completed by March 2024, removing a set of traffic lights and replacing the at-grade junction with a full diamond interchange.[6] The project attracted controversy when it was revealed the original announced cost of $61.5 million in 2021 was based on projections from the 1980s, with the actual cost of the project estimated to be closer to $165 million in 2023.[7]

Interchanges

External links

-12.4325°N 130.8914°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Place Names Register Extract for Tiger Brennan Drive. NT Place Names Register. Northern Territory Government. 17 January 2024.
  2. Web site: Road Photos & Information: Northern Territory: Alphanumeric Routes. Expressway Online. 17 January 2024.
  3. Web site: Tiger Brennan Drive. Australian National Construction Review. 19 January 2024.
  4. Web site: Homepage. 5 March 2015.
  5. Web site: Roads Australia > News. 9 September 2021 .
  6. Web site: $163M NT overpass hits new milestone. Roads and Infrastructure Magazine. 1 December 2023. 17 January 2024.
  7. Web site: Original cost for Tiger Brennan Drive overpass based on 1980s plans, amid cost blowout. Thomas Morgan. ABC News. 15 June 2023. 17 January 2023.