Anzac Highway, Adelaide

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Anzac Highway
South Australia
General information
Type Highway
Length 8.7 km (5 mi)[1]
Route number(s) A5
Major junctions
Northeast end West Terrace (A21), Adelaide
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Southwest end Colley Terrace / Chapel Drive, Glenelg
Location(s)
Major suburbs Plympton, Morphettville
Highway system
Highways in Australia
National HighwayFreeways in Australia
Highways in South Australia

The Anzac Highway is an 11 kilometre main arterial road heading southwest from the city of Adelaide, the capital of South Australia, to the beachside suburb of Glenelg.[2]

Originally[3] the Bay Road (which remains an informal synonym), it mostly follows the track made by the pioneer James Chambers[4] from Holdfast Bay, the first governor's landing site, to Adelaide.[5] It gained its current name in 1923[6] to honour the contribution of the Anzacs (Australian and New Zealand Army Corps) in World War I.

The highway is serviced by a 15-minute Go Zone,[note 1] serviced by the 262, 263 and 265 buses.

History

File:Anzac Highway SW near Morphett.jpg
View of Anzac Highway facing southwest towards the Morphett Road intersection
File:Anzac Highway NE from South Rd Ashford.jpg
Looking towards the city at the South Road intersection in 2008. This intersection has since been replaced with an underpass.

The South Road (A13) intersection with Anzac Highway recently saw major construction works as part of a South Australian Government initiative to transform South Road into a non-stop north-south route.

Under the works, both routes became grade-separated, with South Road proceeding through an underpass with bi-directional controlled exits onto Anzac Highway. The underpass model is a single-point urban interchange. Construction began in October 2007, and the underpass was opened in March 2009, with construction completed in late 2009.

The underpass was named the Gallipoli Underpass, in keeping with the Anzac theme, and each of the 4 corners of the intersection has a display to commemorate those who fought in the war.

Major intersections

LGA Location km[1] mi Destinations Notes
Adelaide Adelaide 0 0 West Terrace (A21) north / Goodwood Road (A21) south / South Terrace east – Adelaide North-eastern highway terminus; no access from Anzac Highway to Goodwood Road
West Torrens Keswick 0.8 0.50 Richmond Road west / Greenhill Road east
Unley Everard Park 2.4 1.5 South Road (A13) – Mile End, Hindmarsh, Darlington, Noarlunga Centre, to Southern Expressway (M2) Diamond interchange (South Road free-flowing)
West Torrens Plympton 4.4 2.7 Marion Road (A14) – Brooklyn Park, Sturt, to Southern Expressway (M2)
Camden Park 5.1 3.2 Cross Road (A3) east / Stonehouse Avenue west – Glen Osmond
Marion Glengowrie 6.4 4.0 Morphett Road – Marion
Holdfast Bay Glenelg 8.0 5.0 Tapleys Hill Road (A15) north / Brighton Road (A15) south – Port Adelaide, Brighton South-western terminus of A5
8.7 5.4 Colley Terrace south / Chapel Drive west Roundabout; south-western highway terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

In popular culture

Anzac Highway is mentioned in the song "One More Boring Night in Adelaide" by Redgum on their 1978 album If You Don't Fight You Lose.

See also

Notes

  1. Adelaide Metro definition: "A Go Zone is an area that offers public transport services every 15 minutes between 7.30am and 6.30pm Monday to Friday, and every 30 minutes at night, Saturday, Sunday and public holidays until approximately 10pm. Stops within Go Zones are indicated by red hoop signs."

References

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  4. Kerr, Margaret Goyder Colonial dynasty: the Chambers family of South Australia Rigby Ltd., Adelaide, 1980. ISBN 0 727010972
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