| Sydney–Newcastle Freeway New South Wales |
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Former marker: |
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| Length | 127 km (79 mi) |
| Direction | North-South |
| From |
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| Major suburbs | Minmi, Awaba, Mandalong, Warnervale, Tuggerah, Ourimbah, Somersby, Peats Ridge, Mount White, Berowra |
| To |
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| Established | 1963–1998 |
| Major junctions |
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The Sydney–Newcastle Freeway is a 127 km (79 mi) stretch of motorway linking Sydney to the Central Coast, Newcastle and Hunter regions of New South Wales. It is part of the AusLink road corridor between Sydney and Brisbane, carrying the National Highway 1 route designation.
The freeway is widely identified as the F3 Freeway by the NSW Roads and Traffic Authority (RTA) & Road users, this identification had been re-introduced as the name on new freeway signs; but in September 2012 it was announced that in a re-design of state routes, the freeway would be renamed the Pacific Motorway with an M1 route shield.
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At its southern end, the freeway starts at Pennant Hills Road, Wahroonga, near its junction with the Pacific Highway (Pearces Corner) in Sydney's north. It heads north, skirting the western edge of the Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park, running parallel with the railway line until it descends to the Hawkesbury River, crossing at Kangaroo Point in Brooklyn. Immediately north of the river, the Hawkesbury River interchange provides access to Brooklyn and Mooney Mooney. The motorway passes through the Brisbane Water National Park, and the Calga interchange gives access to Peats Ridge. At Calga there are major heavy vehicle checking stations on both northbound and southbound carriageways, to assess compliance and roadworthiness of trucks. The freeway then turns east to cross Mooney Mooney Creek by way of the 480 m (1,575 ft) long, 75 m (246 ft) high Mooney Mooney Bridge before it reaches the first major interchange on the Central Coast at Kariong.
After Kariong, the freeway continues through rural and semi-rural areas of the Central Coast with interchanges at Ourimbah, Tuggerah, Warnervale and Kiar, near Doyalson. From the Doyalson interchange the freeway continues to the west of Lake Macquarie with interchanges near Morisset, Cessnock, Toronto and West Wallsend.
At the West Wallsend interchange a link road takes traffic into Newcastle via Wallsend, while the freeway continues north to end at the roundabout at the junction of Weakleys Drive and John Renshaw Drive, Beresfield. From here traffic bound for Highway 1 takes John Renshaw Drive and the New England Highway eastwards to meet the Pacific Highway at Hexham, and Weakleys Drive connects with the New England Highway towards Maitland, Muswellbrook and Tamworth.
Between Wahroonga and Ourimbah the freeway passes through rugged sandstone country, particularly as it descends to and ascends from the Hawkesbury River. This section of the freeway is characterised by deep cuttings and extensive embankments.
| Sydney – Newcastle Freeway |
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| Northbound exits | Distance from Sydney CBD |
Southbound exits |
John Renshaw Drive Weakleys Drive (New England Highway) John Renshaw Drive (Pacific Highway) |
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| End Sydney – Newcastle Freeway |
Start Sydney – Newcastle Freeway |
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| no exit | 149 | BLACK HILL INTERCHANGE Lenaghan, Minmi Lenaghans Drive |
| NEWCASTLE INTERCHANGE Wallsend, Newcastle Hunter Expressway (to open end 2013) Newcastle Link Road |
140 | NEWCASTLE INTERCHANGE Wallsend, Newcastle Newcastle Link Road |
| WEST WALLSEND INTERCHANGE West Wallsend, Seahampton, Cardiff George Booth Drive |
139 | no exit |
| AWABA INTERCHANGE Awaba, Toronto Palmers Road |
126 | AWABA INTERCHANGE Awaba, Toronto Palmers Road |
| FREEMANS WATERHOLE INTERCHANGE Kurri Kurri, Cessnock Freemans Drive |
122 | no exit |
| MORISSET INTERCHANGE Morisset, Cooranbong Mandalong Road |
109 | MORISSET INTERCHANGE Morisset, Cooranbong, Doyalson Mandalong Road |
| WALLARAH CREEK INTERCHANGE Budgewoi, Swansea, Charlestown Motorway Link to Pacific Highway |
98 | no exit |
| WARNERVALE INTERCHANGE Wyee, Toukley, Warnervale Sparks Road |
95 | WARNERVALE INTERCHANGE Wyee, Toukley, Warnervale Sparks Road |
| Caltex Service Centre | 91 | Caltex Service Centre |
| TUGGERAH INTERCHANGE Tuggerah, Wyong, The Entrance Wyong Road |
86 | TUGGERAH INTERCHANGE Tuggerah, Wyong, The Entrance Wyong Road |
| OURIMBAH INTERCHANGE Ourimbah, Palmdale Pacific Highway |
80 | OURIMBAH INTERCHANGE Ourimbah, Palmdale, University of Newcastle Central Coast Campus Pacific Highway |
| SOMERSBY INTERCHANGE Somersby, Peats Ridge, Wisemans Ferry Peats Ridge Road |
74 | SOMERSBY INTERCHANGE Somersby, Peats Ridge, Wisemans Ferry Peats Ridge Road |
| KARIONG INTERCHANGE Kariong, Gosford, Woy Woy, Terrigal Central Coast Highway |
67 | KARIONG INTERCHANGE Kariong, Gosford, Woy Woy, Terrigal Central Coast Highway |
| CALGA INTERCHANGE Calga, Peats Ridge Peats Ridge Road, Pacific Highway |
60 | CALGA INTERCHANGE Calga, Peats Ridge Peats Ridge Road, Pacific Highway |
| MOUNT WHITE INTERCHANGE Mount White Pacific Highway |
55 | MOUNT WHITE INTERCHANGE Mount White Pacific Highway |
| HAWKESBURY RIVER INTERCHANGE Mooney Mooney, Brooklyn Pacific Highway |
47 | HAWKESBURY RIVER INTERCHANGE Mooney Mooney, Brooklyn Pacific Highway |
| Hawkesbury River | ||
| no exit | 37 | BEROWRA INTERCHANGE Berowra Pacific Highway |
| WINDYBANKS INTERCHANGE Berowra Pacific Highway |
33 | no exit |
| MOUNT COLAH INTERCHANGE Mount Colah, Bobbin Head Ku-ring-gai Chase Road |
27 | no exit |
| Start Sydney – Newcastle Freeway End |
23 | WAHROONGA INTERCHANGE Hornsby, Sydney Pacific Highway |
| End Sydney – Newcastle Freeway continues on as Cumberland Highway to Parramatta and Canberra |
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Planning for the freeway began in 1952, with the aim of providing a high-speed replacement for a section of the Pacific Highway that had been built in 1925–30 which was struggling to cope with the increased traffic. It was planned that the freeway would connect to the freeway systems being proposed for both Sydney and Newcastle, providing a city-to-city freeway link.
The route between Mount White and Kariong was originally planned to be further south than the route as built, with an easier crossing of Mooney Mooney Creek. By the time that construction on this section was to begin, resistance from the National Parks and Wildlife Service to the proposed route forced the Department of Main Roads to take a route through Calga, using part of the first stage of a proposed freeway route to Singleton which had been built the 1960s. That scheme has never been further developed.
The route through Wyong Shire also changed; instead of passing east of Wyong along the western edge of the Tuggerah Lakes, development in that area forced the freeway to be moved to the west of Wyong, with a link road being constructed to meet the Pacific Highway near Doyalson.
In addition, the freeway was revised to go to the west of Lake Macquarie rather than the east, and thereby bypass Newcastle. One of the reasons for this change of location was the issue of connectivity to the Pacific Highway north of Newcastle, as the route of the Newcastle Inner City Bypass (State Highway 23), which would have provided a northern exension of the freeway, is problematic in terms of its northern terminus point at Sandgate not easily allowing for a northward freeway-standard route to join to the Pacific Highway.
The sections of the Newcastle Inner City Bypass from the Pacific Hwy at Bennetts Green to Kotara Heights and from Jesmond to Shortland have since been constructed, with the Shortland-Pacific Hwy Sandgate section under construction, while the original freeway route between Belmont and Bennetts Green and then northward to the Pacific Highway at Merewether Heights is still reserved from development, with the possibility that it could be constructed in the future.
The major stages in the construction of the freeway were:[2]
Strong public resistance in the 1970s to freeways being constructed within cities and unfavourable outcomes of government inquiries resulted in several freeway proposals in Sydney being abandoned. This included the connecting Lane Cove Valley and North Western Expressways, which means that the Pacific Highway (a six lane urban arterial) continues to be the connecting route between the freeway's southern terminus at Wahroonga and the city centre.
However plans are currently being developed for extensions at both ends of the F3:
In addition, towards the northern end the Hunter Expressway will branch off the freeway at the Newcastle Link Road interchange and connect to the New England Highway to the dual carriageways on the New England Highway at the Belford Bends deviation west of Branxton. It will be 40 km long and will allow traffic from Sydney and Newcastle to the Upper Hunter Valley and beyond to bypass Maitland. This route will in effect replace the parallel section of the New England Highway. Funding was announced in May 2009, with construction commencing immediately and being scheduled to be completed in 2013.
In addition to the National Highway 1 designation, the freeway at one stage carried the Freeway Route 3 (F3) designation. This route numbering system, introduced in 1971, was to provide distinctive route numbering and signage for freeways in Sydney and the surrounding areas. Although the route was never signed with the F3 route marker (the numbering system was removed in the late 1980s), the route is now widely known as the F3, with this title being used not only colloquially but on all state and federal government documents and web sites. The median crossover signs (located every 1 km) feature an F3 identification sign; in addition, various new street signs also read F3 FREEWAY alongside the M1 or National 1 Route number.
Other than the Pacific Highway, which the freeway has superseded, the freeway is the only direct route between Sydney and the Central Coast, and is the major road route for road transport from Sydney to the Hunter region, northern NSW and Queensland. The freeway thus carries a heavy mix of commuter traffic, road freight transport, and (periodically) holiday and recreational travellers. It often suffers from traffic disruptions, generally associated with traffic volume and congestion related to on-road breakdowns and vehicle accidents, or natural disasters (in particular, bushfire).[8][9]
In addition traffic on the freeway is frequently affected by vehicle crashes, often involving trucks.[10][11] These events have encouraged the NSW motoring organisation NRMA to call for more freight to be moved by rail to reduce the number of trucks using the freeway.[12]
Bushfires have caused closure of the freeway and the nearby railway line and Pacific Highway between Sydney and the Hawkesbury River on a number of occasions in recent decades. One such event of this type was recorded on 21 and 22 January 2007, when a fire broke out in the adjoining Kuring-gai Chase National Park. The fire forced the closure of the two roads and the railway line between Sydney and the Central Coast, resulting in extended disruption to traffic flow.
Because of the frequency of these disruptions to traffic flow, arguments for a second major freeway north from the Sydney metropolitan area continue to be pushed forward.[6][13] However topography and resultant cost rules this out for practical purposes, other than indirect routes crossing the Hawkesbury in the vicinity of Wiseman's Ferry, some 30 km upstream of the current crossing.
Following criticism of significant delays due to accidents and blockages,[14] the NSW Roads and Traffic Authority (RTA) is in the process of constructing a $28 million emergency plan for the freeway which involves development of a 40 km/h contraflow traffic scheme to allow vehicles to travel around an accident.[15]
The Annual average daily traffic (AADT) data from the Roads and Traffic Authority showed a decline in traffic volume on the freeway near its southern end at Wahroonga, from 78,600 in 2002 to approximately 76,600 in 2005 and then to 75,800 in 2006.[6]
The 2004 AADT figures for other locations on the freeway include 73,400 at Mooney Mooney, just north of the Hawkesbury River bridge, 60,100 near Wyong, 38,500 near Wyee, 27,000 near Freemans Waterhole and 33,000 near its northern terminus at Beresfield.[16]
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