Pennant Hills Road

Pennant Hills Road
New South Wales
General information
Type Highway
Length 16 km (10 mi)
Route number(s)
Former
route number
  • Metroad 2
  • Metroad 6
  • Metroad 7
  • State Route 55
  • State Route 77
  • Ring Road 5
Major junctions
North end
 
SW end
Location(s)
Major suburbs Wahroonga, Normanhurst, Thornleigh, Pennant Hills, West Pennant Hills, Carlingford, North Parramatta, Parramatta
Highway system
Highways in Australia
National HighwayFreeways in Australia
Highways in New South Wales
Main article: Cumberland Highway

Pennant Hills Road is a major highway located in Sydney, New South Wales. It runs from the suburb of Wahroonga, in the north, to the major central business district of Parramatta, Australia.

Route description

The road begins in the northern suburb of Wahroonga at Pearce's Corner, the intersection with the Pacific Highway, north-west of the Sydney CBD, and south-east of Hornsby. The Pacific Motorway (F3) ends a few hundred metres south of Pearce's Corner at an intersection with Pennant Hills Road. From here, the road passes through the Hornsby Shire suburbs of Normanhurst, Thornleigh and Pennant Hills. In Thornleigh there is a major intersection with The Comenarra Parkway, an arterial road which begins as Yanko Road in West Pymble. In the evening this intersection can get quite busy, and is often characterised by bumper to bumper traffic on the Comenarra Parkway, as motorists attempt to turn either left or right onto Pennant Hills Road. The Parkway has become somewhat of a through route from the North Shore suburbs as well as the City, with some motorists choosing to avoid Epping Road and The M2 Motorway and travel west through the Parkway.

At Pennant Hills, the highway crosses the Northern Railway Line, intersects with Yarrara Road and Boundary Road,heading west, after which is located a major intersection with Beecroft Road. The highway then heads west, and then south-west towards Thompson's Corner, in West Pennant Hills, where there is a major intersection with Castle Hill Road. In the mid 1990s, a tunnel was built beneath the intersection which allows traffic from Castle Hill Road to turn onto Pennant Hills Road, going southbound, without negotiating the traffic lights. This also means that southbound traffic already on Pennant Hills Road rarely has to stop at the Thompson's Corner intersection, only if pedestrians are crossing.

The highway continues south to the M2 Hills Motorway intersection. Traffic can enter the motorway from Pennant Hills Road to drive either eastbound (towards the City) or westbound (towards Blacktown and Canberra) - as well, motorway traffic is able to exit onto Pennant Hills Road from both directions.

Pennant Hills Road continues south from the M2 intersection through Carlingford and the intersection with North Rocks Road and then onto the intersection with Carlingford Road. South of the Carlingford Road intersection lies the intersection with Marsden Road, and the highway then continues south-west towards Parramatta, crossing the Carlingford Railway Line, and through the suburbs of Telopea and North Parramatta, where the major intersection with James Ruse Drive lies. Pennant Hills Road forms part of the Cumberland Highway until the intersection with James Ruse Drive where it relinquishes that designation to the latter road.[1]

The highway then continues south-west into Parramatta where it meets Church Street.

The highway is a 60 km/h (37 mph) four-lane road from Pearce's Corner for the short distance to the F3 intersection. From the F3 intersection the highway is a 70 km/h (43 mph) six-lane highway for the entire distance to the M2 Motorway intersection. From here, the road reverts to being a 60 km/h (37 mph) four-lane road for the rest of the distance to Parramatta, with short third lanes at various points in each direction. There are numerous 40 km/h (25 mph) "school zones" (8:00am–9:30am and 2:30pm–4:00pm) and there are two fixed speed cameras, between Evans Road and Coleman Avenue in Carlingford and between Castle Street and Bellevue Street in North Parramatta. Both are 60 km/h (37 mph) zones.[2]

Pennant Hills Road frontage is a mix of businesses, schools and homes. The biggest concentration of businesses are at Thornleigh, Pennant Hills, West Pennant Hills (Thompson's Corner) and Carlingford, with the Carlingford area being the biggest.

History

Pennant Hills Road began its life in 1820 as a bullock track used by timbermen. It was surveyed by government surveyor James Meehan in order to provide a route from Ermington Wharf to the Pennant Hills sawmill established by Governor Lachlan Macquarie in 1816. Subsequently it joined the Lane Cove Road (now the Pacific Highway) further north and was sometimes considered the same road. It has been allocated several route numbers over the years, shown in the Infobox on the right.

Route numbering

Sections of Pennant Hills Road have had various road routes allocated since 1964:

Wahroonga - West Pennant Hills

  • Metroad 7 (1993-2013)
  • State Route 77 (1988-1993)
  • State Route 55 (1974-1988)
  • Ring Road 5 (1964-1974)

Pennant Hills - West Pennant Hills

  • Metroad 7 (1993-2013)
  • State Route 77 (1988-1993)
  • State Route 55 (1974-1988)
  • Ring Road 5 (1964-1974)
  • Metroad 2 (1993-1997)

West Pennant Hills - Carlingford

  • Metroad 6 (2005-2013)
  • Metroad 7 (1993-2005)
  • State Route 77 (1988-1993)
  • State Route 55 (1974-1988)[3]
  • Ring Road 5 (1964-1974)

Carlingford - North Parramatta

  • No Shield (2005-2013)
  • Metroad 7 (1993-2005)
  • State Route 77 (1988-1993)
  • State Route 55 (1974-1988)[3]
  • Ring Road 5 (1964-1974)

North Parramatta - Parramatta

  • State Route 55 (1974-1988)[3]
  • Ring Road 5 (1964-1974)

Traffic congestion

Pennant Hills Road has always been the main road north from Parramatta to Hornsby, but with traffic from major arterial roads of James Ruse Drive, Marsden Road, Carlingford Road, North Rocks Road, Castle Hill Road, Beecroft Road, The Comenarra Parkway and the Pacific Highway adding to that, plus the relatively recent additions of the M2 Motorway and the F3 Freeway extension to Wahroonga, the highway can get quite congested during the morning and afternoon peaks and is often characterised by the heavy population of trucks and other logistic vehicles. Unfortunately Pennant Hills Road is the only direct road linking the F3 and the M2, forcing interstate commercial traffic, travellers, and commuters to all compete for passage with local Hornsby Shire traffic. The average traffic flow on Pennant Hills Rd, according to a 2002 survey by the RTA, was 62,656, with the busiest area occurring around Thompsons Corner.

Plans to link the F3 Freeway with a planned North West Freeway were shelved in the late 20th century. Recently the Government has been examining a number of options to link the F3 with the M2 motorway as part of a freeway standard Sydney Bypass.

After undergoing significant studies, the government released plans to construct the F3-M2 link, dubbed the NorthConnex, an underground tunnel linking the two freeways. Expected to open in 2019, it will help alleviate traffic travelling between the two freeways, Western Sydney and the Central Coast.

See also

Australian Roads portal

NorthConnex, a freeway intended to alleviate congestion along the highway

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 27, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.