The National Highway (Australia) reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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National Highway (Australia)

Australia's National HighwayEnlarge

Australia's National Highway

The National Highway is a system of roads connecting all the States and Territories of Australia, and is the major network of highways connecting Australia's largest and most important cities.

The National Highway was established by the National Highway Act 1974 when Gough Whitlam was Prime Minister of Australia. Before then, while the Federal Government helped to fund major roads, it did not assume direct responsibility for their construction or upkeep.

The National Highway is financed entirely by the Federal Government, though State and Territory Governments are responsible for the actual construction and maintenance of the roads that form part of the National Highway.

The National Highway Act specifies which roads are eligible to become part of the National Highway. To qualify, a road or a series of connected roads must be a direct connection between two State or Territory capital cities. The city of Cairns in the far northern part of the State of Queensland is also included in the National Highway Act.

The National Highway also includes a small (by comparison) 320 km segment in Tasmania - from the northern port cities of Burnie, Devonport, to Launceston and ending in the southern capital Hobart.The Melbourne-Devonport ferry route is sometimes described colloquially the 'sea highway', providing a link from Tasmania to the rest of the country by road.

Some stretches across the Nullarbor Plain and along the north-western coastline are quite isolated, with roadside settlements supporting the passing traffic the only human activity for thousands of kilometres. Still other stretches are high-speed high-capacity expressways with six lanes or even more such as Brisbane's Gateway Motorway, Sydney's Eastern Distributor and Melbourne's Monash Freeway.

Average daily traffic counts on Australia's Highway 1 range from as few as 500 vehicles to over 100,000 vehicles every day.

Some of the well-known highways that are part of the National Highway include the Hume Highway, the Bruce Highway, the Eyre Highway and the New England Highway.

National Highways are denoted by a route marker in the shape of the shield found in the Australian coat of arms. The word "NATIONAL" is printed in the upper portion of the shield above the highway's number. The shield, text and number are coloured yellow while the background is dark green - Australia's national colours.

National Highway numbering originates from the earlier National Route network. Many of the routes that are now National Highways with the signature green and gold sheilds, continue beyond the official National Highway as the black and white shielded National Routes. Certain streches of the National Highways have "A" and "M" tag on their shields; particularly those in Victoria and South Australia. They have completely revised their route numbering, basing it on the British M, A, B, C classifications. These states have retained the original National Highway numbering and shield decal, having added the appropriate M and A classification.

List of roads in the National Highway