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Monash Freeway - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Monash Freeway

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Monash Freeway
Formerly
Length 34 km
General direction Northwest-Southeast
From CityLink,
Kooyong, Melbourne
Major suburbs Chadstone, Mulgrave, Doveton, Narre Warren North
To Princes Freeway, Berwick, Melbourne
Established 1973
Allocation M1 (Australia)
Major Junctions Toorak Road
Warrigal Road
Springvale Road
EastLink
Stud Road
South Gippsland Freeway
Princes Highway

for full list see Exits and Intersections

See also: West Gate Freeway, CityLink, and Princes Freeway

Monash Freeway is a freeway linking Melbourne's CBD to its southeastern suburbs and the Gippsland region.

Contents

[edit] Current route and conditions

The freeway officially begins at the southern end of Citylink, at Toorak Road. Here the freeway is four lanes wide before later narrowing to three lanes as traffic merges onto the freeway from Toorak Road. The opposing carriageways of the freeway are relatively near to each other and are separated by a concrete barrier. This section has overhead lighting. This first section of freeway runs through the south-eastern suburbs of Malvern, Victoria, Glen Iris, Victoria and Malvern East.

After Warrigal Road, the freeway is built within a much wider road reserve, allowing for a wide grass centre median with steel barrier separating the carriageways. This section does not have overhead lighting and varies in width between three and four lanes. This section runs through south-eastern metropolitan Melbourne, including the suburbs Chadstone, Victoria, Mount Waverley, Mulgrave, Victoria, Dandenong, Hallam, Victoria, and finally, Narre Warren, where it becomes the Princes Freeway. The final section, the Hallam Bypass, is the newest stretch of the Monash Freeway, and has two lanes in each carriageway.

[edit] Major upgrade

In 2007, the State Government announced a major upgrade widening the lanes from Glenferrie Road through to Heatherton Road. Prior to this, over 160,000 vehicles per day use this freeway resulting in congestion during peak hours. The upgrade started in late 2007 and is expected to be completed in late 2009. The entire project is known as the Monash-CityLink-West Gate upgrade, and is being carried out by VicRoads and Transurban.[1]

[edit] Exits and intersections

Monash Freeway
Northbound exits Distance from
CityLink
(km)
Distance from
Princes Freeway East
(km)
Southbound exits
End Monash Freeway
continues as CityLink
to Melbourne
Avalon / Melbourne Airports
0 34 Start Monash Freeway
from CityLink
Kooyong
Toorak Road
Kooyong
Toorak Road
Glen Iris
Burke Road
2 32 Glen Iris
Burke Road
no exit -- 30 Glen Iris
High Street
GLEN WAVERLEY RAIL LINE 7 27 GLEN WAVERLEY RAIL LINE
Chadstone
Warrigal Road
8 26 Chadstone
Warrigal Road
Mount Waverley
Huntingdale Road
9 -- no exit
Mount Waverley
Forster Road
11 23 Mount Waverley
Forster Road
Mount Waverley
Blackburn Road
12 22 Mount Waverley
Blackburn Road
no exit -- 21 Mulgrave
Ferntree Gully Road
Mulgrave
Springvale Road
14 -- no exit
Mulgrave
Wellington Road
16 18 Mulgrave
Wellington Road
no exit -- 16 Mulgrave
Jacksons Road
Dandenong North
Police Road
20 14 no exit
Dandenong North
EastLink
Dandenong North
EastLink
Dandenong North
Dandenong Valley Highway
22 12 Dandenong North
Dandenong Valley Highway
Dandenong North
Heatherton Road
23 11 Dandenong North
Heatherton Road
Doveton
South Gippsland Freeway
26 8 Doveton
South Gippsland Freeway
Hallam
Belgrave-Hallam Road
28 6 Hallam
Belgrave-Hallam Road
no exit -- 5 Narre Warren
Ernst Wanke Road
Narre Warren
Narre Warren North Road
32 2 Narre Warren
Narre Warren North Road
Berwick
Princes Highway
34 0 Berwick
Princes Highway
Start Monash Freeway
continues from Princes Freeway
End Monash Freeway
continues as Princes Freeway
to Warragul

[edit] History

Monash Freeway (former South Eastern Arterial) viewed from the footbridge at East Malvern Station
Monash Freeway (former South Eastern Arterial) viewed from the footbridge at East Malvern Station

The Monash Freeway is an amalgamation of two initially separate freeways: the Mulgrave Freeway (initially designated ) linking Warrigal Road, Chadstone to the Princes Highway in Eumemmerring; and the South Eastern Freeway (initially designated ) linking Punt Road, Richmond and Toorak Road, Hawthorn East.

[edit] Mulgrave Freeway

Initial construction on the Mulgrave Freeway started in 1970 and was completed in 1973, with bi-directional interchanges with Heatherton and Stud Roads. Later in the 1970s and in the early 1980s it was progressively extended westward to Forster Road - with additional interchanges at Blackburn, Ferntree Gully, Wellington and Jacksons Roads (and eventually Police Road many years later) - then to Huntingdale Road, and finally to Warrigal Road in Chadstone. Construction at the Hallam end extended underneath an interchange at the Princes Highway and southwards along the old alignment of the South Gippsland Highway to the interchange with Dandenong-Hastings Road, now the Westernport Highway at Lyndhurst; this section was initially named the Eumemmerring Freeway, but later named the South Gippsland Freeway. The designation was dropped in 1988, coinciding with the opening of the South Eastern Arterial.

Interestingly at this time the Tullamarine Freeway also carried the route shield. A look at a 1969 freeway plan of Melbourne shows why. The two freeways were to be linked to each other from around East Malvern (at the Mulgrave Freeway end) and at Flemington (at the Tullamarine Freeway end), sweeping through the St Kilda area. The plan never came to fruition, however the two freeways have since been linked by the West Gate Freeway extension and the CityLink project.

[edit] South Eastern Freeway

Initial construction of the South Eastern Freeway had completed by the mid-1960s, connecting Burnley to Olympic Park at Harcourt Parade, which fed traffic to Punt Road at the Hoddle Bridge: an overpass across Punt Road quickly followed to end at Anderson Street and the Morell Bridge, with a single-carriageway feeder road to the Swan Street Bridge (and Batman Avenue) 800 metres beyond. The freeway was eventually further extended east from Burnley under the MacRobertson bridge along the Yarra, to Toorak Road (with a single-carriageway feeder road taking excess traffic to Burke Road), completed in 1971. Initially designated in the 1960s, it was later signed as until 1988, when the South Eastern Arterial was completed.

[edit] South Eastern arterial link

The resulting gap between the Toorak/Burke Road end of the South Eastern Freeway and the Warrigal Road end of the Mulgrave Freeway frustrated drivers for many years, needing to rely increasingly on feeder roads to bridge the distance between them. The State Government proposed a road to connect them during the mid-1980s, before finally agreeing on an alignment and allowing construction to commence on a dual-carriageway link between the freeways; construction finished in 1988, and the link - and later the entire length of the now-connected freeway, from the city to Eumemmerring - was re-christened as the South Eastern Arterial; the new stretch of road also re-designated , with the Princes Highway (Dandenong Road) becoming an alternative route.

The project attracted a great deal of controversy just before it opened and well afterwards: in order to save costs, only one freeway-style interchange had been constructed (underneath High Street in Glen Iris). Every other interchange with major roads along the route (Toorak, Burke, Tooronga and Warrigal Roads) was an at-grade intersection controlled by traffic-lights, and due to the fact that the road was constructed through residential areas, reduced speed limits were also enforced. This led to heavy congestion, frequently kilometres long, on the freeway, fuelling anger and frustration, and even attracting a rather-apt moniker of "the South-Eastern Carpark".

With a change of government several years later and a lot of political showmanship, more money was poured into the link road, constructing underpassed interchanges at Toorak and Burke Roads (and just an underpass at Tooronga Road), and a new overpass across Warrigal Road. New noise barriers and extra lanes were also constructed, and the freeway 'upgrade' was completed and the entire length renamed back to the South Eastern Freeway, before changing name again to the now-current Monash Freeway, so named by Premier Kennet after General Sir John Monash, arguably Australia's greatest soldier, engineer, scholar and nation builder. The improved road dramatically improved the rate of out-bound traffic, however the bottleneck at the Swan Street bridge still remained and the queues only got longer. A portion of the Monash Freeway at the city end (from Toorak to Punt Roads) was eventually incorporated into the CityLink project in the late 1990s by way of tunnels underneath the city to link to the eastern-end of the West Gate Freeway, allowing for an uninterrupted voyage past the CBD.

[edit] Hallam bypass

The sweeping curve of the freeway at the Hallam end that became the South Gippsland Freeway had its capacity reduced from three lanes to two, resulting in a notorious bottle-neck at peak hours, especially for out-bound traffic exiting at the Princes Highway interchange outside Dandenong; the extension finally bypassed the entire problem.

The freeway was extended by 7.5 km in late 2003 when the Hallam Bypass was completed after 3 years of construction, connecting the Monash Freeway in Hallam to the Princes Freeway in Berwick. It opened 6 months ahead of schedule and A$80 million under budget due to the omission of one key interchange that links the Hallam Bypass with the South Gippsland Freeway at Eummemmering. This omission causes unnecessary congestion on neighbouring roads as this traffic must exit the freeway at Princes Highway only to join the same freeway again from Belgrave-Hallam Road.

The Monash Freeway allows travel from Beaconsfield in the south-east of Melbourne, to Corio in the north-east of Geelong - via CityLink and the West Gate and Princes Freeways. Motorists can cover some 110 km without encountering a set of traffic lights. The construction of the bypass also included the Hallam Bypass Trail shared path.

The entire stretch of the Monash Freeway bears the designation .

[edit] See also

[edit] References


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