Jump to content

Hester Avenue

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hester Avenue

View east towards Ridgewood
Map
Hester Avenue is located in Perth
Hester Avenue
Hester Avenue
Location of Hester Avenue within the Perth Metropolitan Region
Coordinates
General information
TypeRoad
Length2.8 km (1.7 mi)
Major junctions
East end Wanneroo Road (State Route 60), Neerabup
  Mitchell Freeway
Connolly Drive
West end Marmion Avenue (State Route 71), Mindarie
Location(s)
Major suburbsNowergup, Ridgewood, Clarkson, Merriwa

Hester Avenue (previously known as Quinns Road) is an east-west distributor road in the northern suburbs of Perth, Western Australia, located within the City of Wanneroo. It primarily links the coastal suburbs of the Clarkson-Butler region to the arterial highway Wanneroo Road in the east.

The road begins as a four-lane dual carriageway at Wanneroo Road, before intersecting with the Mitchell Freeway at Clarkson in the form of an elongated dogbone roundabout separated by a bridge crossing both the freeway and the Yanchep line. The road terminates at a roundabout with Marmion Avenue, where it becomes Anchorage Drive North, a local distributor road in the suburb of Mindarie. The speed limit begins at 60 km/h, increasing to 70 km/h at the dual carriageway.

Direct access to the Nowergup railway depot is also provided by the road.

History

[edit]

Hester Avenue was designed in the early 1970s as a new alignment of Quinns Road, an already-existing east-west road that directly linked Wanneroo Road to the coastal townsite of Quinns Rocks. It was named after Thomas Hester, an early settler and local land-owner in the area, whose name was also initially proposed for the adjoining suburb of Merriwa.

The new alignment was first built in 1990 to coincide with the developments of Mindarie and Merriwa by Smith Corporation, running onto the original Quinns Road at the intersection of the future Connolly Drive. The portion of Quinns Road in between Marmion Avenue and Connolly Drive was then closed to general traffic and turned into a cul-de-sac in Merriwa, where it was renamed Palermo Court.

Hester Avenue deviates south-westerly from the original Quinns Road from Connolly Drive onwards, where it runs directly into Mindarie. Quinns Road west of Marmion Avenue survives today as a local distributor road in Quinns Rocks, while the unaltered portion east of Connolly Drive now assumes the name Hester Avenue for its entire length.

The road was built into a dual carriageway from Marmion Avenue to Hidden Valley Retreat, Clarkson, in 2003.[1]

In 2017 the Hester Avenue Bridge was demolished and replaced as part of the wider Mitchell Freeway Expansion.[2] It was the northern terminus of the Mitchell Freeway from August 2017 until July 2023, when the extension of the Mitchell Freeway from Hester Avenue to Romeo Road was completed.[3]

Intersections

[edit]

The entire road is in the City of Wanneroo local government area.

LocationkmmiDestinationsNotes
NeerabupNowergup boundary00.0 Wanneroo Road (State Route 60) – Wanneroo, Perth, LancelinEastern terminus at T junction
NeerabupNowergupRidgewoodClarkson quadripoint0.90.56 Mitchell Freeway (State Route 2) – Joondalup, PerthElongated dogbone-style roundabout
RidgewoodClarkson boundary1.20.75Hidden Valley Retreat – Clarkson
1.40.87Ridgewood Boulevard – Ridgewood
1.60.99Porongorup Drive – Clarkson
Ridgewood–Merriwa–Clarkson tripoint1.81.1Connolly Drive – Butler, Kinross, CurrambineRoundabout
Merriwa–Clarkson boundary2.31.4Baltimore Parade – Merriwa
2.61.6Renshaw Boulevard – Clarkson
Merriwa–Clarkson–Mindarie tripoint2.91.8 Marmion Avenue (State Route 71) north & south / Anchorage Drive west – Yanchep, Ocean Reef, Hillarys, MindarieWestern terminus at roundabout
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

[edit]

icon Australian Roads portal

References

[edit]
  1. ^ City of Wanneroo. "Annual General Meeting of Electors - 22 November 2002" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 March 2012.
  2. ^ "Focus Demolition | Hester Avenue Bridge Demolition". Focus Demolition. 10 September 2019. Retrieved 24 January 2020.
  3. ^ "Mitchell Freeway Extension". project.mainroads.wa.gov.au. Retrieved 24 January 2020.