Gold Coast Highway

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Gold Coast Highway links the coastal suburbs of the Gold Coast in South East Queensland such as Southport, Surfers Paradise, Burleigh Heads and Tugun to across the border of New South Wales to the Tweed Heads suburb of Tweed Heads West. At Script error: No such module "convert".[1] in length, the highway runs just west of Pacific Motorway at Helensvale to Pacific Motorway at Tweed Heads West.

It is characterised by a variety of urban landscapes, ranging from:

The highest point of the highway is 42 metres at Currumbin Hill at Currumbin.[2]

History

File:Queensland State Archives 4683 Pacific Highway Surfers Paradise June 1952.png
The Pacific Highway in Surfers Paradise in 1952

The Gold Coast Highway has existed since 1963, when the Main Roads Department reclassified much of Queensland’s road system.

When the highway was first declared, it was only a two-lane road along its entire length. The first section of dual carriageway to be built stretched from North Street, Southport, to Fern Street, Surfers Paradise. It was completed in 1966. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, duplication was extended south to Burleigh Heads, and the highway through Palm Beach and Bilinga was also duplicated at this time. In 1974, new bridges were built at Tallebudgera and Currumbin Creeks. In 1985, alongside the extension of the Pacific Highway from Reedy Creek to Tugun, the last section south of Southport was completed, from Winders Avenue to Kitchener Street in Tugun.

The section between Tugun in Queensland and Tweed Heads West in New South Wales was formerly part of Pacific Highway. The first stage of the Tweed Heads bypass, a two-lane road connecting Pacific Highway (today Coolangatta Road) at Bilinga across the border to Kennedy Drive at Tweed Heads West, was opened in 1985 at a total cost of $3.6mil, with the second carriageway completed in December 1986;[3] the second stage, bypassing Tweed Heads South connecting Kennedy Drive over Terrenora Creek to Pacific Highway (today Minjungbal Drive, renamed 19 February 1997[4]) was completed on 15 November 1992, at a total cost of $46 mi,[5] and Pacific Highway redefined to use this new alignment.

The Tugun Bypass, connecting Pacific Motorway at Tugun Hill in Queensland to Pacific Highway about 1 kilometre north of the interchange with Kennedy Drive at Tweed Heads West in New South Wales, opened in June 2008, extending the motorway around (and under) the Gold Coast Airport. The former alignment of Pacific Highway within Queensland was quickly re-declared as part of Gold Coast Highway; the New South Wales government eventually followed a year later.

The passing of the Roads Act of 1993[6] through the Parliament of New South Wales updated road classifications and the way they could be declared within New South Wales. Under this act, Gold Coast Highway was declared as State Highway 31 on 1 May 2009, from the state border with Queensland to the interchange with Pacific Motorway at Tweed Heads West, subsuming the former alignment of State Highway 10 (the Pacific Highway, which was re-declared to use the Tugun bypass).[7] The highway today, as Highway 31, still retains this declaration.[8]

Road conditions

File:GoldCoastHwy01.jpg
Northbound towards Beach Road, Surfers Paradise
File:Surfers Paradise Street Circuit aerial view.jpg
An aerial view of the highway as seen from a helicopter during the Gold Coast 600 in 2019.

The highway is divided along the entire length, mostly with four lanes. There are some six lane segments (often as bus lanes). It is also predominantly well lit at night, with a few exceptions such as Currumbin and Burleigh Heads. Median fencing to prevent pedestrians crossing has also been introduced in areas such as Mermaid Beach. The highway at Surfers Paradise is subject to congestion during events, notably during the Gold Coast 500 held each October when part of the highway becomes part of the Surfers Paradise Street Circuit at Paradise Waters. The highway width is reduced to two lanes (one carriageway) and the speed limit reduced to 40 km/h.

Projects and improvements

1. Labrador: Between Government Road and North Street, along a section mostly called Frank Street. The Highway was upgraded from a single carriageway to a divided 4 lane highway. A new bridge with a 4 lane crossing was completed across Loders Creek in 2007. The road upgrade resulted in a thoroughfare similar to that in Surfers Paradise, with a narrow median and narrow road reserve due to limited space and to minimise property resumptions. One of the two lanes in each direction was initially designated a transit lane (buses and vehicles with 2 or more occupants), but this designation was removed in 2013.[9]

File:Gold Coast Highway over Tallebudgera Creek.JPG
Bridge over Tallebudgera Creek

2. Broadbeach to Miami: Bus lanes were added along the route as well as changes to bus stops, u-turns, traffic lights, signs, lighting and the median strip. The first phase (Alexandra Avenue to Hilda Street) was finished in mid September 2008. The second phase (Hilda Street to Chairlift Avenue) was largely completed in July 2009.[10]

3. Tugun: The most notorious bottle-neck was at Tugun, where the Gold Coast Highway joins the Pacific Highway Script error: No such module "convert". north of Coolangatta was eliminated with the opening of the Tugun Bypass in June 2008. Some minor changes and improvements near Stewart Road in Tugun have coincided with the completion of the bypass to deal with the changed traffic flow.

Upgrade projects

Oxley Drive and Olsen Avenue intersection

A project to upgrade the intersection of Oxley Drive and Olsen Avenue at the Gold Coast Highway in Biggera Waters, at a cost of $10.68 million, was completed in mid-2021.[11]

Toolona Street intersection

A project to upgrade the Toolona Street intersection in Tugun, at a cost of $1.5 million, started in September 2021.[12]

Public transport

File:Sun City Building & Gold Coast WHY.jpg
Gold Coast Highway looking south near Birt Ave with Sun City building on the left. Image taken in 2007, before the upgrade. This section of the highway is now 2 lanes each way.

Bus

Bus services throughout the area are operated by Kinetic Gold Coast. Route 700 operates along the highway between Broadbeach South and Tweed Heads. On Sunday to Thursday nights it continues north of Broadbeach South to the Gold Coast University Hospital. It is the only 24-hour bus route in Australia. It is complemented by limited stops route 777 from Broadbeach South to Gold Coast Airport.[13][14]

Bus Lanes are in place along some sections of the highway, particularly Broadbeach to Mermaid Beach and Miami.

Light Rail

The G:link light rail line opened in July 2014 between Gold Coast University Hospital and Broadbeach South. It has its own reservation to the west of the Gold Coast Highway from Southport to Surfers Paradise, from where it diverges onto Surfers Paradise Boulevard. It then rejoins the Gold Coast Highway at the south end of Surfers Paradise proceeding via a reservation in the median strip to Broadbeach North before crossing again to the western side to terminate at Broadbeach South. The northern extension to Helensvale opened in December 2017.[15]

Railway

Helensvale railway station is located near the northern end of the highway. It is on the Gold Coast railway line with services operating frequently along the electrified line between Brisbane and Varsity Lakes.

Air

Gold Coast Airport is located at the southern end of the highway. It has frequent flights to Sydney and Melbourne as well as international services to New Zealand, Japan and South-East Asia.

Major intersections

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Trivia

  • Musician David Grohl was famously arrested in a northern Surfers Paradise section of the Gold Coast Highway after electing to drunkenly ride back to his band's Marriott hotel on a rented moped scooter following the Foo Fighters' performance at the Big Day Out in January 2000.[16] Grohl reportedly blew an alcohol level of 0.095 at a sobriety checkpoint on the Gold Coast Highway and was subsequently jailed for one night.[17]

See also

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References

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  3. Queensland Roads, July 1987
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  6. State of New South Wales, An Act to make provision with respect to the roads of New South Wales; to repeal the State Roads Act 1986, the Crown and Other Roads Act 1990 and certain other enactments; and for other purposes. Template:Webarchive 10 November 1924
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  13. Route 700 timetable TransLink 21 July 2014
  14. Route 777 timetable TransLink 21 July 2014
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External links

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