Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Coffs Harbour: Coffs Harbour Bypass 12 [108] 2021 [108] 2024 [108] $1.2 billion [108] Construction four lane freeway with 3 interchanges, new alignment, 2 tunnels and a cut and cover tunnel 524 Port Macquarie to Coffs Harbour: Lyons Rd to Englands Rd 5.3 [109] October 1997 [110] 25 May 2001 [110] $73m [111] Complete Duplication and ...
The Macleay Valley Way is a road in the Mid North Coast region of New South Wales that connects the Pacific Highway to Kempsey and Frederickton.It runs along a former section of the Pacific Highway that was bypassed by a newer alignment between 2013 and 2016.
Panoramic view of the Coffs Harbour marina, NSW Australia, from Muttonbird Island. Coffs Harbour, locally nicknamed Coffs, [4] is a coastal city on the Mid North Coast of New South Wales, Australia, 540 km (340 mi) north of Sydney, and 390 km (240 mi) south of Brisbane. It is one of the largest urban centres on the North Coast, with a ...
Western Harbour Tunnel in Sydney, to connect the M4-M5 Link, Victoria Road and the Anzac Bridge at Rozelle, with the Warringah Freeway at Cammeray, under planning and anticipated to open in 2028. North East Link in Melbourne, to connect the M80 Ring Road at Greensborough with the M3 Eastern Freeway at Bulleen, under planning and anticipated to ...
New England Highway is an 883-kilometre (549 mi) long [1] highway in Australia running from Yarraman, north of Toowoomba, Queensland, at its northern end to Hexham at Newcastle, New South Wales, at its southern end.
Under this act, when Pacific Highway's Grafton bypass opened in May 2020, Summerland Way (as Main Road 83) was officially extended south along the old alignment of Pacific Highway on 5 July 2022, [17] although the road is known locally and sign-posted as Big River Way. Summerland Way today, as part of Main Road 83, still retains this declaration.
The British Australian Tramway was a 9 kilometres (5.6 mi) long logging railway with a gauge of 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) in Coffs Harbour in the Australian state New South Wales, which operated from 1907 to 1914.
The Dorrigo line was intended to be part of a much larger rail system linking the ports of Coffs Harbour and Grafton with the Northern and North western lines. The line would have joined with the system at Guyra, Inverell and Werris Creek. These plans never came to fruition and construction work was commenced on only two sections, between ...