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Paringa Bridge

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34-611: The Paringa Bridge carries the Sturt Highway across the Murray River in Paringa, South Australia . Until 1982, it also carried the Barmera railway line . The bridge consists of a vertical-lift span 78 feet (24 m) long which can rise 30 feet (9.1 m) in one and a half minutes. There are three Pratt truss spans of 112.5 feet (34.3 m), and a plate girder span at each end. It

68-528: Is an Australian national highway in New South Wales , Victoria, and South Australia . It is an important road link for the transport of passengers and freight between Sydney and Adelaide and the regions along the route. Initially an amalgam of trunk routes , the 947-kilometre (588 mi) Sturt Highway was proclaimed a state highway in 1933. In 1955, the Australian Government gazetted

102-602: Is expected to start late in 2022 and be completed by the end of 2026. The project will adjust the alignment to reduce the steep hill between the Murray Flats and Truro. It will be built to a standard suitable for triple road trains . There is a proposed Mildura Truck Bypass, to be funded by Auslink 2. From east to west, the Sturt Highway follows much of the course of the Murrumbidgee River, on its southern banks, from

136-416: Is no provision to turn directly from one to the other. Road definitions also changed: the definition of Sturt Highway was lengthened a short distance west along the bypass to meet the expressway, resulting in a shortening of the bypass by a distance of 3.5km. It was designated National Route 20, updated to National Highway 20 in 1992, and to National Highway A20 in 1998. This was changed to route A52, south of

170-582: Is now the southbound on-ramp and Brereton Road, Jack Cooper Drive over the Winckel Bridge, and Paternoster Drive to the railway bridge. The road was rebuilt in the mid-1980s as a dual carriageway, with grade-separated intersections at the southern end in a new alignment, with new bridges over the Gawler River . At the time of approval, the bypass was carrying 7,000 vehicles per day. 300 collisions had been recorded between 1977 and 1982. It began construction at

204-503: The Main Roads (Amendment) Act of 1929 to provide for additional declarations of State Highways and Trunk Roads, these were amended to State Highways 4 and 6 and Trunk Road 58 on 8 April 1929. Mid-Western Highway was rerouted between Gunbar and Balranald to pass through Hay, and the western end of Trunk Road 58 was truncated to meet it at Hay, on 24 September 1929. The route of the main road from Narrandera to Darlington Point had shifted to

238-779: The Main Roads Act of 1924 through the Parliament of New South Wales provided for the declaration of Main Roads, roads partially funded by the State government through the Main Roads Board (later Transport for NSW ). Main Road No. 4 was declared along this road from the intersection with Hume Highway from Lower Tarcutta to Wagga Wagga (and continuing eastwards via Tumut, Adaminaby, Cooma, and Bega to Tathra) as part of Monaro Highway , Main Road No. 6

272-595: The Northern Expressway and Northern Connector were assigned as route M2, route A20 reverted to following Main North Road south to Gepps Cross . A new alignment is proposed to be built to the north of the town of Truro , to remove the highway traffic from the main street of the town. The bypass is proposed to be funded by the Australian government for $ 161.6 million and state government $ 40.4 million. Construction

306-550: The 2000s and 2010s to help make it safer with the high volume of traffic. Major 'S'-bend curves near Waikerie were realigned, and further upgrades to the road were performed up to 2012. The original route of Sturt Highway in the Riverland passing through Berri and Glossop was bypassed to pass through Monash in 1995. The former alignment is now known as the Old Sturt Highway , route B201. The original route passed through

340-606: The English explorer, travelled from Limestone Plains (now Canberra ) to Adelaide via this route in 1837, as did Charles Sturt in 1838. Eyre on his second run to South Australia headed west, following the northern bank of the Murrumbidgee River instead, crossing it at its junction with the Murray close to Boundary Bend , and travelled to Adelaide from there. The road pioneered by Eyre in 1839 left Hume Highway at Gundagai and followed

374-588: The South Australian border as late as 1914 ran along the northern bank of the Murrumbidgee to Darlington Point – a bridge was built across the river in 1905, replacing a punt service operating from 1886 – and then continued along the river's southern bank to Hay, crossing the river again (a bridge in Hay was opened in 1874 by Sir Henry Parkes , replacing a ferry service operating since the 1850s). The route then travelled

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408-661: The Sturt's eastern terminus with the Hume Motorway . At Balranald , the Sturt Highway crosses the Murrumbidgee, carrying the highway to the north of the river via the Balranald Bridge. To the west and south-west, Sturt Highway crosses the Murray four times: The bridge at Blanchetown was originally opened in 1964. It replaced cable ferries, and was itself replaced in 1998 in response to concern about its ability to continue to carry B-double trucks. The bridge at Kingston On Murray

442-563: The border with New South Wales in Mildura . None of the Sturt Highway was originally constructed as dual-carriageway . Work began in January 2007 to upgrade the highway to a four-lane, dual-carriageway road between Gawler Bypass and Greenock in the Barossa Valley. The project was completed in 2010 with budget savings directed towards further Sturt Highway improvements. Northern Expressway

476-481: The end of 1985. Its total cost was $ 18 million, of which $ 13 million came from Federal funding. In 2010, construction of the Northern Expressway realigned the northbound carriageway as part of creating a grade-separated intersection, with smooth traffic flow between the northern section of the bypass and both the Northern Expressway and the southern part of the bypass. As both roads lead broadly south, there

510-536: The federal National Roads Act 1974 , where roads declared as a National Highway were still the responsibility of the states for road construction and maintenance, but were fully compensated by the Federal government for money spent on approved projects. As an important interstate link between the capitals of New South Wales and South Australia, Sturt Highway was declared a National Highway in 1992. With all three states' conversion to their newer alphanumeric systems between

544-564: The highway as a National Route, and upgraded it to a National Highway in 1992, forming the Sydney-Adelaide Link. Sturt Highway is allocated as route A20 for its entire length, the majority of which is a single carriageway , and freeway standard and 6-lane arterial road standard towards its western terminus in Gawler. The highway is the shortest, highest-standard route between Sydney and Adelaide. It runs generally east–west, roughly aligned to

578-555: The highway passes through the city of Wagga Wagga and the towns of Narrandera , Darlington Point , Hay , Balranald , and Euston , leaving New South Wales by crossing the Murray River into Victoria from Buronga to Mildura . The highway continues more or less due west through the northwest of Victoria before entering South Australia. In South Australia, Sturt Highway passes Renmark , Monash , Barmera , Waikerie , Blanchetown and Nuriootpa , before reaching its western terminus at

612-456: The interchange with Gawler Bypass and Northern Expressway on the outskirts of Gawler . The route now known as Sturt Highway originated from stock routes cut across southern New South Wales through the 19th century: overlanders would travel from Sydney's Main South Road (now Hume Highway ) to Albury , and follow along the southern bank of the Murray River to Adelaide . Edward John Eyre ,

646-447: The intersection with Hume Highway at Lower Tarcutta via Wagga Wagga, Hay, Balranald, Euston and Wentworth to the state border with South Australia, subsuming the existing portions of Monaro Highway (State Highway 4) between Wagga Wagga and Lower Tarcutta, Sturt Trunk Road (Trunk Road 58) from Wagga Wagga to Hay, and Mid-Western Highway (State Highway 6) from Hay to the state border with South Australia. eventually to Adelaide via Renmark;

680-487: The intersection with Hume Highway north of Tarcutta to the bridge over the Murray River at Mildura. The passing of the Road Management Act 2004 through the Parliament of Victoria granted the responsibility of overall management and development of Victoria's major arterial roads to VicRoads : in 2004, VicRoads re-declared Sturt Highway (Arterial #6610) from the border with South Australia at Murray-Sunset to

714-616: The late 1990s to the early 2010s, its former route number was updated to A20 for the highway within Victoria (in 1997), South Australia (in 1998), and eventually the New South Wales section (in 2013). The passing of the Roads Act of 1993 through the Parliament of New South Wales updated road classifications and the way they could be declared within New South Wales. Under this act, Sturt Highway today retains its declaration as Highway 14, from

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748-617: The middle of the Barossa Valley , along what is now the Barossa Valley Way . This first changed to a route passing to the north of Nuriootpa , around to the north and west of Gawler on the Gawler Bypass and Main North Road to Gepps Cross . It later changed to use the Northern Expressway instead. The more recent road duplication led to it bypassing Daveyston and Shea-Oak Log instead of passing through these small towns. When

782-418: The national highway out of Gawler town centre. It has been upgraded and realigned several times since then. The first Gawler bypass was planned in the 1950s. It was first built as a single two-lane carriageway around the town in 1963, with at-grade intersections, and carried 3,000 vehicles per day. It ended at a tee-junction with Main North Road at the southern end, and followed an alignment that included what

816-419: The northern bank of the Murrumbidgee through the sites of Wagga Wagga, Narrandera, Hay and Balranald, and the north bank of the Murray River through the sites of Euston and Wentworth , passing north of Lake Victoria to the border with South Australia and onwards to Renmark. By 1852 a mail service by horseback operated from Wagga Wagga as far west as Balranald. The route used by coaches between Wagga Wagga and

850-421: The northern side of the Murrumbidgee through Maude and Balranald and onwards to Adelaide. By 1919 the route from Hay had been altered to travel the river's southern bank to Maude, before departing the water course for a more-direct route to Balranald, crossing the river there by a bridge opened in 1876. By 1928, the route had shifted south of the Murrumbidgee River between Tarcutta and Narrandera. The passing of

884-623: The road and rail traffic. The last train crossed the bridge on 21 May 1982 with the line beyond Renmark formally closed on 7 March 1984. The railway tracks were removed in 1986 and the centre reservation converted to a shared pedestrian and cycle path. The vertical-lift span is opened twice a day for river traffic. The bridge was listed as a State Heritage Place on the South Australian Heritage Register on 29 June 1989. [REDACTED] Media related to Paringa Bridge at Wikimedia Commons Sturt Highway Sturt Highway

918-411: The southern bank of the Murrumbidgee River in New South Wales. Following that river's confluence with the Murray River , it is then roughly aligned to the Murray through north-western Victoria and eastern South Australia, before it heads towards the northern outskirts of Adelaide. The eastern terminus of Sturt Highway is at a junction with Hume Highway at Tarcutta , near Gundagai . Heading west,

952-569: The southern side of the river at this stage, thus following the present route east from Balranald. On 16 September 1930, the road between Wagga Wagga and Hay (Trunk Road 58) was named Sturt Trunk Road , in honour of Captain Charles Sturt who explored the area a century earlier and opened it up for agriculture. The Department of Main Roads , which had succeeded the MRB in the previous year, declared Sturt Highway as State Highway 14 on 8 August 1933, from

986-505: The western end of Monaro Highway (today Snowy Mountains Highway ) was truncated to meet Hume Highway in Tarcutta, and the western end of Mid-Western Highway was truncated to meet Sturt Highway in Hay, as a result. On 1 July 1938, the South Australian government decreed "the road from Gawler through Blanchetown to the border beyond Renmark will be known as the Sturt Highway", to join with the same road in New South Wales. In 1939, Sturt Highway

1020-525: Was built at the south-western end of Sturt Highway, as part of an AusLink / Government of South Australia project to build a new freeway-standard road, as part of the North–South Corridor project, providing better access for road transport to Port Adelaide and the industrial areas west and northwest of Adelaide. Other projects in South Australia include a number of overtaking lanes added in

1054-405: Was declared from Balranald via Euston and Wentworth to the state border with South Australia (and continuing eastwards via Oxley, Booligal, Gunbar, Rankins Springs, Wyalong and Cowra to Bathurst) as part of Mid-Western Highway , and Main Road No. 58 was declared from Hay via Narranderra to Wagga Wagga (and continuing westwards via Maude to Oxley), on the same day, 8 August 1928. With the passing of

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1088-512: Was designed by the South Australian Railways (SAR) and fabricated by Perry Engineering of Adelaide . It opened on 31 January 1927. It was built as a road-rail bridge with both the Sturt Highway and Barmera railway lines using the same reservation. Maintenance cost were shared equally between the SAR and Highways department. Subsequently, road lanes were added on either side to segregate

1122-418: Was opened in 1973, also replacing a very busy ferry crossing. South Australia Victoria New South Wales Gawler Bypass Gawler Bypass is a major north–south route in the outer northern suburbs of the city of Adelaide , South Australia , connecting Main North Road to the Sturt Highway , bypassing Gawler . The route was built in 1963 in an attempt to redirect traffic on

1156-589: Was rerouted to run via Mildura , using the former alignment of Murray Valley Highway , to make it the most direct route to Adelaide. Murray Valley Highway had been constructed in 1927 to provide a shorter, all-weather road connection between Mildura and Renmark, and was declared a State Highway by the Country Roads Board of Victoria in September 1932. Sturt Highway was signed National Route 20 across its entire length in 1955. The Whitlam government introduced

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