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Hyland Highway | |
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Coordinates |
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General information | |
Type | Highway |
Length | 59.9 km (37 mi) [1] |
Route number(s) | C482 (1998–present) |
Former route number | State Route 188 (1990–1998) |
Major junctions | |
North end | Princes Highway Traralgon, Victoria |
| |
South end | South Gippsland Highway Yarram, Victoria |
Location(s) | |
Major settlements | Gormandale |
Highway system | |
Hyland Highway is a road connecting the towns of Traralgon and Yarram in the Gippsland region of Victoria, Australia. The highway was named after Sir Herbert Hyland, a popular politician for the Country Party in the Gippsland area.
Highland Highway starts at the intersection of Princes Street and Breed Street, heading south as a dual-lane, single-carriageway road, nearly immediately crossing the Bairnsdale railway line just east of Morwell railway station, then heads east after a roundabout, then after another kilometre turns south to leave Traralgon's suburbs, curving around Loy Yang's open-cut coal mine, then heads south through Gormandale, through the eastern stretches of the Strzelecki Ranges, to eventually end at the intersection with South Gippsland Highway, 2 kilometres north-east of Yarram.
The road was originally known as Yarram-Traralgon Road and declared a Main Road by the Country Roads Board (later VicRoads) from at least 1955. [2]
The construction of the open-cut coal mine for Loy Yang Power Station in the late 1970s required the road to be re-routed along Traralgon Creek Road (west of the coal mine) and Bartons Lane (south of the coal mine); the former alignment is now known as Craigburn Place (to the mine's north) and Broomfields Lane (to the mine's south-east).
The passing of the Transport Act of 1983 [3] (itself an evolution from the original Highways and Vehicles Act of 1924 [4] ) provided for the declaration of State Highways, roads two-thirds financed by the State government through the Road Construction Authority (later VicRoads). The Hyland Highway was declared a State Highway in December 1990, [5] from Traralgon to Yarram; before this declaration, the road was referred to as Traralgon Creek Road and Yarram-Traralgon Road. [5]
Hyland Highway was signed as State Route 188 between Traralgon and Yarram in 1990; with Victoria's conversion to the newer alphanumeric system in the late 1990s, it was replaced by route C482.
The passing of the Road Management Act 2004 [6] granted the responsibility of overall management and development of Victoria's major arterial roads to VicRoads: in 2004, VicRoads re-declared the road as Hyland Highway (Arterial #6170), beginning at Princes Highway at Traralgon and ending at South Gippsland Highway in Yarram. [7]
LGA | Location [1] [7] | km [1] | mi | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Latrobe | Traralgon | 0.0 | 0.0 | Princes Highway (M1 east, west) – Sale, Bairnsdale, Warragul, Melbourne Breed Street (north) – Traralgon | Northern terminus of highway and route C482 at traffic lights |
0.1 | 0.062 | Bairnsdale railway line | |||
0.2 | 0.12 | Bank Street (C476) – Churchill, Boolarra | Roundabout | ||
Loy Yang–Traralgon South boundary | 6.6 | 4.1 | Mattingley Hill Road (C475) – Morwell, Churchill, Boolarra | ||
6.9 | 4.3 | Traralgon Creek Road (C483) – Callignee | |||
Wellington | Willung South | 31.6 | 19.6 | Grand Ridge Road (C484) – Carrajung, Mirboo North | |
Carrajung Lower | 39.1 | 24.3 | Carrajung–Woodside Road (C453) – Woodside, Woodside Beach | ||
Yarram | 59.9 | 37.2 | South Gippsland Highway (A440) – Sale, Foster, Leongatha, Lang Lang | Southern terminus of highway and route C482 at T junction | |
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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