R562 (South Africa)

Last updated

SA road R562.svg
Regional route R562
Route information
Maintained by Gauteng Department of Roads and Transport
Length27 km (17 mi)
Major junctions
West endSA road N14 jct.svgSA road R511.svg N14  / R511 in Diepsloot
Major intersectionsSA road R55.svg R55 in Midrand
SA road N1 jct.svg N1 in Midrand
SA road R101.svg R101 in Midrand
East endSA road R21.svg R21 near Thembisa
Location
Country South Africa
Major cities
Highway system
SA road R561.svg R561 SA road R563.svg R563

The R562 is a Regional Route in Gauteng, South Africa that connects Diepsloot with Olifantsfontein (Clayville) and Thembisa via Midrand. [1]

Route

Its western terminus is an intersection with the R511 road (Winnie Mandela Drive) and the N14 highway at Diepsloot. It heads east as Summit Road, passing by Bridle Park and crossing the R55 (Main Road) to enter Midrand.

At the junction with the R55, the R562 changes its street name to Olifantsfontein Road and continues eastwards, separating the Country View and Noordwyk suburbs of Midrand. Just after Noordwyk, the R562 meets the N1 jhighway (Ben Schoeman Highway) and crosses it to enter the suburb of Randjespark.

Just after the N1 interchange, the R562 forms an intersection with the R101 (Old Pretoria Main Road). The R562 joins the R101 northwards for 1.6 km before it becomes its own road eastwards, named Winnie Madikizela-Mandela Drive (previously Olifantsfontein Road [2] ), to form the northern border of the Glen Austin suburb. Just after the Randjesfontein suburb of Midrand, the R562 leaves the City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and enters the City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality.

In Ekurhuleni, the R562 forms the southern border of the town of Olifantsfontein (Clayville) and the northern border of the township of Thembisa. It forms a junction with the M57 metropolitan route just south of Clayville East before reaching its eastern terminus at an interchange with the R21 highway.

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References

  1. "RDDA SOUTH AFRICAN NUMBERED ROUTE DESCRIPTION AND DESTINATION ANALYSIS". NATIONAL DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORT. May 2012. Retrieved 25 March 2021.
  2. "Here are the streets affected by Ekurhuleni's new name changes". The Citizen. 13 October 2021. Retrieved 2 January 2022.