Earth:North West Coastal Highway

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Short description: Highway in Western Australia

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North West Coastal Highway is a generally north-south Western Australian highway which links the coastal city of Geraldton with the town of Port Hedland. The 1,300-kilometre-long (808 mi) road, constructed as a sealed two-lane single carriageway, travels through remote and largely arid landscapes. Carnarvon is the only large settlement on the highway, and is an oasis within the harsh surrounding environment. The entire highway is allocated National Route 1, part of Australia's Highway 1, and parts of the highway are included in tourist routes Batavia Coast Tourist Way and Cossack Tourist Way. Economically, North West Coastal Highway is an important link to the Mid West, Gascoyne and Pilbara regions, supporting the agricultural, pastoral, fishing, and tourism industries, as well as mining and offshore oil and gas production.

In Geraldton, the highway begins at a grade separated interchange with Brand Highway and roads providing access to the port and town centre. Two major roads link the North West Coastal Highway to the inland Great Northern Highway: Geraldton–Mount Magnet Road in Geraldton, and Nanutarra Munjina Road at Nanutarra, 845 kilometres (525 mi) further north. Several roads link provide access to coastal towns and attractions, including Shark Bay Road, Onslow Road and Karratha Road. With few towns on the highway, roadhouses are the only settlements for long stretches. North West Coastal Highway ends at Great Northern Highway, 30 kilometres (19 mi) out from Port Hedland.

North West Coastal Highway was created in 1944 from existing roads and tracks through remote pastoral areas. However, it was a hazardous route that could be dusty in the dry season, and boggy or washed away in the wet season. Economic growth and development in northern Western Australia prompted initial improvement efforts in the late 1940s, and a sealed road was constructed from Geraldton to Carnarvon by 1962. The impact of cyclones and seasonal flooding resulted in a realignment inland of the Carnarvon to Port Hedland section, which was constructed and sealed between 1966 and 1973, and required thirty new bridges.[1] Various upgrades have been carried out in sections across the length of the highway, including the Geraldton Southern Transport Corridor project which grade-separated the highway's junction with Brand Highway.

Route description

North West Coastal Highway is the coastal route through Western Australia's remote north-west. From the Mid West city of Geraldton, the highway heads north 50 kilometres (31 mi) to the small town of Northampton, and another 425 kilometres (264 mi) to Carnarvon, the only large settlement along the route. It continues north-east for 660 kilometres (410 mi) to Roebourne, 30 kilometres (19 mi) beyond the turnoff to Karratha, and ends 160 kilometres (99 mi) further east at Great Northern Highway, 30 kilometres (19 mi) out from Port Hedland. Apart from Whim Creek, between Roebourne and Port Hedland, roadhouses serving the highway are the only settlements on the long stretches of rangeland expanses between these towns. The highway provides access to tourist destinations including Shark Bay, Coral Bay, and Exmouth.[2][3][4] North West Coastal Highway supports the diversified economies of the Mid West and Gascoyne regions, including mining, agriculture, fishing and tourism,[5][6] transitioning to primarily mining, pastoral stations and offshore oil and gas production in the Pilbara.[7]

The entire highway is allocated National Route 1, part of Australia's Highway 1,[8] and parts of the highway are included in the tourist routes Batavia Coast Tourist Way (Tourist Drive 354) and Cossack Tourist Way (Tourist Drive 351).[9] The vast majority of the highway is a two-lane single carriageway with a speed limit of 110 kilometres per hour (70 mph), except in and around built up areas where it drops down to 50, 60, or 70 kilometres per hour (30, 35, or 45 mph).[10]

Main Roads Western Australia monitors traffic volume across the state's road network, including various locations along North West Coastal Highway.[11]:3 In the 2012/13 financial year, the recorded traffic volumes ranged from 13,350 vehicles per day west of Geraldton–Mount Magnet Road down to 370 north of Minilya–Exmouth Road. The highest percentage of heavy vehicles was 45.5%, west of Karratha Road.[11]:71, 75–76 Reports commissioned by the Royal Automobile Club of Western Australia (RAC) in 2006 and 2008 gave most of the highway a four-star safety rating out of five, but with a significant proportion rated at a three-star level.[lower-alpha 1] The overall highway network was generally rated as three-star or four-star, with around 10% in 2006 and 5% in 2008 receiving a two-star rating.[12][13]

Geraldton to Carnarvon

View south along North West Coastal Highway, about 27 km (17 mi) south of the Wooramel Roadhouse

North West Coastal Highway commences at a diamond interchange at the northern end of Brand Highway. It heads east from the interchange and curves round to the north, past a traffic-light intersection with Geraldton–Mount Magnet Road. The highway continues north through Geraldton's outer suburbs for eight kilometres (5 mi) before the landscape transitions to scrubland. Between Geraldton and Carnarvon, the highway passes through remote and dry semi-desert areas. Apart from Northampton, 50 kilometres (31 mi) out from Geraldton, the only settlements over this 475-kilometre (295 mi) stretch are four roadhouses. Binnu Roadhouse[coord 1] is 11 kilometres (7 mi) south of Kalbarri Road, the turnoff to Kalbarri; Billabong Roadhouse[coord 2] is 50 kilometres (31 mi) south of the Shark Bay turnoff, where the Overlander Roadhouse[coord 3] is located; and the Wooramel Roadhouse[coord 4] is near the Wooramel River crossing.[2][3][4]

Carnarvon, at the mouth of the Gascoyne River, is the only large town between Geraldton and Karratha, and is an oasis within an arid region. East of the town, the landscape near the river features banana and other horticultural plantations,[14] while the vegetation in the surrounding region is primarily shrublands.[15] The highway skirts east of Carnarvon, and crosses the Gascoyne River nine kilometres (6 mi) north-east of Robinson Street, the main road into the town.[2][4]

Carnarvon to Port Hedland

North of Carnarvon, the highway passes through desert and becomes very flat. Bridges span many ephemeral rivers and creeks,[16]:229 with strands of eucalyptus along their floodplains.[2][17] The next roadhouse, 135 kilometres (84 mi) beyond Carnarvon, is the Minilya Roadhouse adjacent to the Minilya River.[coord 5] Seven kilometres (4 mi) further on is the turnoff to the North West Cape area, including Cape Range National Park, Coral Bay and Exmouth.[2][4]

Crossing the Ashburton River

North West Coastal Highway reaches the Pilbara after 100 kilometres (62 mi), where it deviates further inland. The highway continues north-east for 130 kilometres (81 mi), crossing the Ashburton River close to Nanutarra Roadhouse.[coord 6] Nearby it intersects Nanutarra Munjina Road, an access road to the mining towns of Tom Price and Paraburdoo and the ghost town of Wittenoom.[2][4]

Over the next 260 kilometres (160 mi), the road crosses the Robe River, near the turnoff to Pannawonica, the Fortescue River, adjacent to the Fortescue River Roadhouse,[coord 7] and Maitland River, before it reaches Karratha Roadhouse.[coord 8] The roadhouse is located at the turnoff to Karratha, the nearby town of Dampier, and the Burrup Peninsula. Forty kilometres (25 mi) east, Roebourne is the gateway to Wickham, Point Samson and the ghost town of Cossack. The highway continues east 125 kilometres (78 mi) to the locality of Whim Creek, crosses the Yule River after a further 55 kilometres (34 mi), and finishes 20 kilometres (12 mi) beyond at Great Northern Highway, 30 kilometres (19 mi) south-west of Port Hedland and South Hedland.[2][4]

History

Origins

Before the mid-1920s, travelling north from Geraldton necessitated going through Mullewa, Dairy Creek and Gascoyne Junction. In 1926, a direct route joining Geraldton and Carnarvon was constructed, shortening the trip by 160 km (100 mi). At first, this was little more than a rough bush track, at least partly used for extracting sandalwood. As there was often little water along this route, tanks with catchment roofs were built at eight locations along the track. The tanks were named for their distance from Carnarvon, at 40, 55, 85, 110, 125, 150, 180, and 200 miles. These tanks provided a life-saving function but when the road was later sealed, they became less important and were gradually removed except for Number 8 tank. Number 8 tank is still used by travellers and marks a point 100 mi (200 km) from Geraldton, 200 mi (300 km) from Carnarvon.[18]

Western Australia's Nomenclature Advisory Committee[lower-alpha 2] proposed in October 1940 that a highway name be used to describe the main route from Midland to Geraldton,[20] and extending to areas further north.[21] The suggested name was Great Northern Highway, following on from the naming of the Great Eastern and Great Southern highways.[21] By July 1941, the committee's proposal had expanded to three highway names for the roads in the state's northern areas: Great Northern Highway for the Midland Junction to Wyndham road, Geraldton Highway for Walebing–Mingenew–Geraldton route,[lower-alpha 3] and North West Coastal Highway for "the road from Geraldton to De Grey, via Northampton, Galena, Carnarvon, Boolaganoo, Winning Pool, Giralia, Yanrey, Onslow, Peedamullah, Mardie, Karratha, Roebourne, Whim Creek, Mundabullangana and Port Hedland".[23] The proposal was well received by the local municipal councils and road boards.[23][24][25]

The flooded Gascoyne River in Carnarvon, 1942, with water rushing over the deck of the bridge. During such floods, roads could become bogs or be completely washed away.

The name North West Coastal Highway was gazetted on 21 April 1944, under section 10 of the Land Act, 1933–1939.[26] However, the highway was mostly a series of tracks through remote pastoral areas, with the sealed road ending just past Northampton, approximately 50 kilometres (31 mi) north of Geraldton.[16]:120 Driving was difficult and hazardous all year round. The road was very dusty in the dry season, and some sections of the road were effectively impassable sand, while other sections contained limestone outcrops that damaged tyres. During the wet season, when rivers flooded, sections of road were essentially bogs, or worse still, were completely washed away.[16]:120–121

Economic growth and development in Western Australia's northern regions in the 1940s prompted the state to quadruple road funding between 1946 and 1952. Two "gangs" of workers were allocated to a 900-mile (1,400 km) length of North West Coastal Highway. Given the vast distance the highway travelled, and destructive cyclones in the Pilbara and Gascoyne that could destroy multiple weeks worth of work, the overall improvement was relatively insignificant. Over time, though, the road was improved.[16]:120–121

Sealing

In the late 1950s a significant project was undertaken to seal the highway between Geraldton and Carnarvon. The sealed road had progressed northwards in the preceding years, but only by approximately eight to ten miles (13 to 16 km) each year. The rate of work increased rapidly, and by 1960, a 100-mile (160 km) stretch extending south from Carnarvon had been sealed. By the middle of that year, the sealing reached 135 miles (217 km) beyond Geraldton and came 114 miles (183 km) south of Carnarvon, with a 76-mile-long (122 km) gap. The project was completed in 1962 when the two sections converged at the 455-mile peg,[lower-alpha 4] and was officially opened on 1 September. Completion of the sealed road resulted in increased tourist traffic, and a longer tourist season.[16]:185–186

A large cyclone swept through the Carnarvon area in February 1961, causing much devastation to the road network. Many floodways were completely washed away, and North West Coastal Highway was immersed in flood water for 60 miles (97 km) either side of Onslow. Carnarvon was cut off from general traffic for two weeks, and the damage to the roads in the region took months to repair. Approval was given to realign the road further inland, where it would be less susceptible to flooding.[16]:184–185

By the 1960s North West Coastal Highway had become a crucial connection for development in the Pilbara – including the pastoral industry, tourism, and the emergence of iron ore mining. In 1966 the traffic volume was up to 125 vehicles per day, and the unsealed road needed constant maintenance to cope with this demand. There were also frequent delays due to flooding. In 1966 the state government announced that the sealed road would be extended to Port Hedland, over a nine-year period. Substantial portions of the highway would also be relocated above the flood plain.[16]:221–222 The new alignment on higher ground would be 50 miles (80 km) shorter, and would make bridging rivers easier.[16]:227

External images
Main Roads Department builds the North West Coastal Highway, February 1970 – sealing works near Winning Pool.
Official opening of the North West Coastal Highway, 6 December 1974 – opened by Premier Charles Court.

Work started at Carnarvon, and 190 miles (310 km) had been completed by 1969. Locally available material was used to great extent during construction, with techniques adjusted based on what was available; however, some resources were transported across vast distances. Water, scarce in the dry climate of the North West, was conveyed up to 15 miles (24 km), aggregate up to 100 miles (160 km), and bitumen up to 850 miles (1,370 km). The project required thirty bridges, over riverbeds that could be dry all year, but might receive as much as 1,300 millimetres (51 in) of rainfall in three months, as had been the case at Onslow in 1961. The bridges were designed to withstand twenty-year floods, but more severe possibilities were anticipated – the approaches were built lower than the bridge decks, so that excess water would flow around the bridges, rather than over them.[16]:227–230

The sealing of North West Coastal Highway was nearing completion in 1973; additional resources provided to complete the work resulted in the final section, Port Hedland to Roebourne, being finished in only five months. An official opening ceremony was held at South Hedland on 6 December 1974, with the road pronounced open by Premier Charles Court. The final cost of the project was approximately $31 million,[16]:237 substantially more than the initial estimate of $17 million.[16]:222 This was mainly due to two factors: increased construction standards, and inflation, which rose from 4% to 13% between 1970 and 1974.[16]:237

Further improvements

In the 1980s the highway's flood resistance was improved with the construction of new, higher-level bridges to replace lower crossings. Galena Bridge over the Murchison River opened on 9 December 1983, and a new bridge over the Harding River near Roebourne was opened on 22 March 1985.[16]:305 In the late 1980s the various sections of road across Western Australia's road network were upgraded or reconstructed, with the worst segments prioritised. In August 1988, work on upgrading five and a half kilometres (3.4 mi) of North West Coastal Highway was completed, the final section between Geraldton and Carnarvon to have been brought up to standard. In the following two years, segments with a combined length of 241 kilometres (150 mi) were resealed, and 45 kilometres (28 mi) was widened from 6.2 to 7 metres (20 to 23 ft), with a one-metre-wide (3.3 ft) sealed shoulder on each side.[16]:366–367

Maitland River bridge following Cyclone Monty, 2004

The northernmost section of the highway, from Great Northern Highway to Port Hedland, was made part of Great Northern Highway in early 1996.[27] Over a ten-year period from 1996 to 2006, numerous improvements were made to the highway, with sections widened, reconstructed, and realigned. Intersections and stretches through townsites were also redesigned, existing bridges were strengthened, and new bridges replaced older bridges or floodways.[28]:29 Additional work was necessary to repair damage from natural events. Sections washed away by floods in January 2003 were rebuilt, and opened in October of that year, and repairs to the damage from Cyclone Monty in March 2004 were completed that November.[28]:125–127

The biggest individual project in this period, across all of rural Western Australia, was Stage 1 of the Geraldton Southern Transport Corridor. The project, constructed between March 2004 and December 2005 at a cost of $92.5 million, involved the relocation of railway tracks, five kilometres (3.1 mi) worth of road works, and grade separation of roads.[28]:27–28 North West Coastal Highway's southern terminus at Brand Highway was upgraded from a roundabout[29] to an interchange, and an overpass was built for Durlacher Street to cross North West Coastal Highway. The highway was also made into a dual carriageway in the vicinity of the interchange.[30] Stage 2 of the project, constructed between December 2008 and December 2009, provided a single carriageway connection from a traffic light-controlled intersection on the highway to Geraldton–Mount Magnet Road, with access to Geraldton Airport.[31]

In 2013 work began on a project to seal the highway's shoulders from Yannarie River at Barradale to the Onslow turn-off; it is expected to be completed by mid-2015.[32] Further work to widen the highway between Minilya and Barradale, including replacing two floodways with bridges, is expected to be completed by the end of 2017.[33]

Major intersections

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See also

  • Highways in Australia
  • List of highways in Western Australia

Notes

  1. Three-star sections included (approximately) the first 150 kilometres (93 mi) north of Geraldton, a 15-kilometre (9.3 mi) stretch south of Carnarvon, and four 40-to-80-kilometre-long (25 to 50 mi) sections between Carnarvon and the turnoff to Dampier.[12][13]
  2. Now the Geographic Names Committee[19]
  3. Modern-day The Midlands Road and Brand Highway[3][22]
  4. The peg indicated the distance from Perth, 732 kilometres.[16]:185

Coordinates

Map all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 
Download coordinates as: KML · GPX

References

  1. Roads Australian Transport March 1965 page 15
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Google (18 April 2015). "North West Coastal Highway" (Map). Google. Retrieved 18 April 2015. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named MRWA midwest
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named MRWA upper
  5. Main Roads Western Australia (2013). "Mid West Regional Profile" (PDF). Government of Western Australia. https://www.mainroads.wa.gov.au/Documents/Midwest%20Regional%20Profile%202013.RCN-D13%5E23432526.PDF. 
  6. Main Roads Western Australia (2013). "Gascoyne Regional Profile" (PDF). Government of Western Australia. https://www.mainroads.wa.gov.au/Documents/Gascoyne%20Regional%20Profile%202013.RCN-D13%5E23445920.PDF. 
  7. Main Roads Western Australia (2013). "Pilbara Regional Profile" (PDF). Government of Western Australia. https://www.mainroads.wa.gov.au/Documents/Pilbara%20Regional%20Profile%202013.RCN-D13%5E23728690.PDF. 
  8. Distance book (13th ed.). Main Roads Western Australia. 2013. pp. 4–5. ISBN 0-7309-7657-2. http://www.mainroads.wa.gov.au/UsingRoads/TouringWAMaps/Pages/DistanceBook.aspx. Retrieved 18 April 2015. 
  9. Main Roads Western Australia; Western Australian Tourism Commission. "Tourist Drives of Western Australia" (PDF). Main Roads Western Australia. pp. 32–33, 36. http://www.tourism.wa.gov.au/Publications%20Library/Tourist%20Drives%20of%20WA.pdf. 
  10. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named RIMS
  11. 11.0 11.1 Main Roads Western Australia (2014). "Statewide Traffic Digest 2008/09 – 2013/14" (PDF). Government of Western Australia. http://reportingcentreresources.mainroads.wa.gov.au/public/data/xrc4111/AADT/traffic_digest.pdf. 
  12. 12.0 12.1 Roberts, Paul; Affum, Joseph; Taylor, Samantha (August 2006). "AusRAP Star Rating Maps and Road Protection Scores for Rural Western Australian Roads" (PDF). Royal Automobile Club of Western Australia. http://rac.com.au/cs/idcplg?IdcService=GET_FILE&dDocName=raccont022475&allowInterrupt=1&RevisionSelectionMethod=LatestReleased&noSaveAs=1&format=.pdf. 
  13. 13.0 13.1 "Safer Roads: Star Ratings for WA's Major Highways" (PDF). Royal Automobile Club of Western Australia. January 2008. http://rac.com.au/cs/idcplg?IdcService=GET_FILE&dDocName=raccont022474&allowInterrupt=1&RevisionSelectionMethod=LatestReleased&noSaveAs=1&format=.pdf. 
  14. "Shire of Carnarvon Demographic and Economic Profile". Shire of Carnarvon. 2014. p. 15. http://www.carnarvon.wa.gov.au/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/Carnarvon-profile-Aug-2014.pdf. 
  15. "Carnarvon Bioregion". Commonwealth of Australia. p. 1. http://www.environment.gov.au/system/files/resources/a8015c25-4aa2-4833-ad9c-e98d09e2ab52/files/bioregion-carnarvon.pdf. 
  16. 16.00 16.01 16.02 16.03 16.04 16.05 16.06 16.07 16.08 16.09 16.10 16.11 16.12 16.13 16.14 Edmonds, Leigh (1997). The vital link: a history of Main Roads Western Australia 1926–1996. Nedlands, Western Australia: University of Western Australia Press. ISBN 1-875560-87-4. 
  17. Elith, Jane; Bidwell, Sjaan (2004). Identification and Assessment of Nationally Threatened Woodlands: Description of Ecological Communities: Arid Eucalypt Woodlands (Report). Canberra ACT: Commonwealth Department of the Environment and Heritage. pp. 277–278. http://www.environment.gov.au/system/files/resources/d1d1d634-a913-4a40-baaa-6344a0aaba5e/files/arid-eucalypt.pdf. 
  18. "200 Mile Tank". Government of Western Australia, State Heritage office. http://inherit.stateheritage.wa.gov.au/Public/Inventory/PrintSingleRecord/c6388868-da84-4c1c-b1fc-ff30e0b82067. 
  19. Western Australian Land Information Authority. "Geographic Names Committee". Government of Western Australia. http://www.landgate.wa.gov.au/corporate.nsf/web/Geographic+Names+Committee. 
  20. "Midland Junction Affairs". The West Australian (Perth, WA): p. 3. 23 October 1940. http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article46744914. 
  21. 21.0 21.1 "Local and General". Geraldton Guardian and Express (WA): p. 2. 24 October 1940. http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article67277690. 
  22. Main Roads Western Australia (13 August 2013). Wheatbelt North Region map (PDF) (Map). Version 1.0. Government of Western Australia. Archived (PDF) from the original on 6 October 2013. Retrieved 20 December 2013.
  23. 23.0 23.1 "Northern Highways". The West Australian (Perth, WA): p. 6. 23 July 1941. http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article47153477. 
  24. "Local and General". Geraldton Guardian and Express (WA): p. 2. 31 July 1941. http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article67313098. 
  25. "Greenough Road Board". Geraldton Guardian and Express (WA): p. 4. 14 August 1941. http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article67312173. 
  26. Template:Gazette WA
  27. "Dates of Major Changes to the Road Network – Rural Area" (PDF). Government of Western Australia. pp. 6–7. https://www.mainroads.wa.gov.au/Documents/Dates%20of%20Major%20Changes%20to%20the%20State%20Road%20Network%20-%20web%20version.u_2961318r_1n_D10%5E23254093.PDF. 
  28. 28.0 28.1 28.2 Edmonds, Leigh (2008). The Vital Link: The Transition Years 1996–2006. East Perth, W.A.: Main Roads Western Australia. ISBN 0-7309-7692-0. 
  29. Jordan, Diana, ed (2005). "Geraldton Set For Early Finish" (PDF). Thiess Quarterly News (Thiess Pty Ltd) 1: 6–7. http://www.leighton.com.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0009/11142/N_ThiessNewsMarch2005.pdf. Retrieved 16 April 2015. 
  30. "Project Overview: Geraldton Southern Transport Corridor" (PDF). Government of Western Australia. https://www.mainroads.wa.gov.au/Documents/GSTC_project_overview.u_2051730r_1n_D08%5E23179824.PDF. 
  31. "Geraldton Southern Transport Corridor Stage 2". Government of Western Australia. 3 September 2014. https://www.mainroads.wa.gov.au/BuildingRoads/Projects/CompletedProjects/2010Earlier/Pages/geraldton.aspx. 
  32. "North West Coastal Highway: Sealing of Shoulders – Barradale to Pannawonica Road". Government of Western Australia. 17 March 2015. https://www.mainroads.wa.gov.au/BuildingRoads/Projects/Regional/Pages/NorthWestCoastalHighway.aspx. 
  33. "North West Coastal Highway Widening: Minilya to Barradale". Government of Western Australia. 17 March 2015. https://www.mainroads.wa.gov.au/BuildingRoads/Projects/Regional/Pages/NWCH.aspx. 

External links

Template:WA road routes