South Gippsland Freeway

South Gippsland Freeway is a short freeway linking Dandenong in Melbourne's south–east to other south–eastern destinations, including the Mornington Peninsula and the Gippsland region. The freeway bears the designation M420.

South Gippsland Freeway

South Gippsland Freeway is located in Melbourne
North end
North end
South end
South end
Coordinates
General information
TypeFreeway
Length6.0 km (3.7 mi)[1]
Opened1972-78
Route number(s) M420 (1997–present)
Former
route number
  • M1 (1997–2003)
  • National Route 1 (1988–1997)
    (Doveton–Eumemmerring)
  • Metro Route 65 (1988–1997)
    (Eumemmerring–Lyndhurst)
    [2]
  • Freeway Route 81 (1973–1988)
    (Doveton–Eumemmerring)
    [3]
Major junctions
North end Monash Freeway
Doveton, Melbourne
 
South end Western Port Highway
Lynbrook, Melbourne
Location(s)
Major suburbs / townsEumemmerring, Dandenong South
Highway system

Route

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South Gippsland Freeway starts at the interchange with Monash Freeway in Endeavour Hills and runs south as a four-lane, dual-carriageway route, under the Princes Highway at Eumemmering, over the Pakenham railway line, then along the western border Hampton Park until it ends at the interchange with the South Gippsland and Western Port Highways in Lynbrook.

The standard travel time on the South Gippsland Freeway is 4 minutes (city-bound) and 3 minutes (Lynbrook-bound). The usual peak period travel time, is between 6–8 minutes. However, in times of extreme congestion or roadworks, including being residual due to an incident, the travel time can well exceed 10 minutes.

History

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Plans for a "Mulgrave By-pass Road and Eumemmerring By-pass Road" had been made as far back as 1966, between Warrigal Road in Chadstone and Princes Highway at Eumemmerring.[4] The freeway began as an overflow from construction of Mulgrave Freeway (now Monash Freeway) in 1970, where the freeway entered a sweeping turn south, crossed Eumemmerring Creek in Doveton and officially terminated at Princes Highway in Eumemmerring: this section opened in 1972 as Eumemmering Freeway,[5] and was later renamed South Gippsland Freeway in April 1974.[6] The freeway was extended 2.5 kilometres further south to terminate at the original alignment of the South Gippsland Highway where it met Pound Road in 1976.[7]

The last extension 3.5 kilometres south connected Pound Road to Lyndhurst, where Lyndhurst Road (renamed Dandenong-Hastings Road not long afterwards) met the South Gippsland Highway. The highway's old alignment was duplicated and upgraded into the new stretch of the freeway, and a new dual-carriageway alignment of the South Gippsland Highway was constructed approximately a kilometre to the freeway's west. Pound Road was extended a few hundred metres west across a new bridge over the freeway, with Dandenong-bound ramps. Lyndhurst Interchange, where the freeway and the old and new alignments of the South Gippsland Highway met, was reconstructed to allow traffic to head south via an overpass above the realigned South Gippsland Highway to Dandenong-Hastings Road.

Extensions to the Mulgrave Freeway – renamed the South Eastern Arterial in 1988, subsuming the section between Doveton and Eumemmering – also resulted in heavier use of the South Gippsland Freeway. The bridge over Lyndhurst Interchange was duplicated with little fanfare in the late 1998s, leading to increased use of the road, mostly to semi-trailers and heavy freight to get to the docks in the Westernport district (Dandenong-Hastings Road was yet again renamed the Western Port Highway to reflect this and was eventually duplicated). Traffic levels dropped substantially when the Hallam bypass opened in 2003; the South Gippsland Freeway was extended back to its original terminus in Doveton at a new junction with the Monash Freeway.

In 2010, the Pound Road half-diamond interchange was substantially upgraded with a new four-lane carriageway being constructed over the freeway, the addition of traffic lights to the on-ramp intersection, and ramp metering signals. These works were completed late 2011.[8]

In recent years, the freeway has become very busy, carrying high volumes of traffic off the South Gippsland Highway, Western Port Highway and the Pound Road and Princes Highway on-ramps. The freeway attracts all these vehicles, a large proportion of which are freight (hence two ramp metering sites inbound have a priority lane), due to the Monash Freeway which connects to it, being the major south-east freeway leading to Melbourne City. It is also the only freeway (or non-tollway, such as EastLink) to the city. It has led to slow or heavy traffic (inbound) during the morning peak and gets even more congested when the Monash Freeway is already heavy. Outbound is not so bad, although when very heavy traffic comes off the Monash Freeway (outbound), it can cause a bottleneck near and around the Princes Highway interchange, so a ramp signal site was installed to meter out traffic and reduce flow breakdown.

So, as part of the major 2007 M1 (Monash-CityLink-WestGate) Upgrade; which included widening to more lanes, updates to safety, electronic drive time signs and associated arterial road real-time information signs and a freeway management system with ramp metering (key component). The freeway was also upgraded to include a Freeway Management System, from its start at the South Gippsland Highway interchange to the Monash Freeway junction. It added Ramp Metering signals to the South Gippsland Freeway / Pound Road / Princes Hwy (inbound) on-ramps (the outbound on-ramp already had an existing metering site). With this, it also included electronic real-time information signs on the three inbound on-ramps, showing travel times and flow conditions downstream from that respective location to either destinations on the Monash Freeway and/or South Gippsland Freeway. Therefore, it also included installation of hundreds of new in-road sensors on the freeway with associated access point poles, data stations and CCTV cameras. It is completely integrated with the M1 Monash Freeway.

Timeline of development

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Road classification

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The freeway was signed Freeway Route 81 upon its opening in 1972, until its replacement with National Route 1 in 1988 (with a portion of it renamed to the South Eastern Arterial) until the Princes Highway in Eumemmering, and the remaining stretch between Eumemmering and Lyndhurst Interchange allocated Metropolitan Route 65. With Victoria's conversion to the newer alphanumeric system in the late 1990s this was replaced by routes M1 and M420 respectively. When the Hallam bypass opened and route M1 reallocated along it in 2003, route M420 was officially extended north to the new junction with the Monash Freeway.

The passing of the Road Management Act 2004[10] granted the responsibility of overall management and development of Victoria's major arterial roads to VicRoads: in 2004, VicRoads re-declared South Gippsland Freeway (Freeway #1310) from Monash Freeway at Doveton to Western Port Highway in Lynbrook.[11]

Exits

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LGALocation[1][11]km[1]miDestinationsNotes
CaseyDoveton0.00.0  Monash Freeway (M1) – Chadstone, CityNorthern terminus of freeway and route M420; no northbound exit to Monash Freeway eastbound
Eumemmerring1.81.1  Princes Highway (Alt National Route 1) – Dandenong, Berwick, Warragul
Greater DandenongDandenong South4.32.7  Pound Road (Metro Route 12) – Hampton Park, Dandenong SouthSouthbound exit and northbound entry only
Lynbrook6.03.7  South Gippsland Highway (M420 southeast, unallocated northwest) – Dandenong, Cranbourne, Phillip IslandPartial cloverleaf interchange; route M420 continues southeast along South Gippsland Highway
  Western Port Highway (M780) – Cranbourne South, HastingsSouthern terminus of freeway; road continues south as Western Port Highway
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "South Gippsland Freeway" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved 30 December 2014.
  2. ^ South Gippsland Freeway, South Gippsland Highway, Bass Highway & Phillip Island Road (M/A/B420), Expressway — Paul Rands. Retrieved on 8 September 2013.[self-published source]
  3. ^ Freeway Route Numbering System, Main Roads Victoria. Retrieved on 4 September 2013.[self-published source]
  4. ^ "Country Roads Board Victoria. Fifty-Third Annual Report: for the year ended 30 June 1966". Country Roads Board of Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 4 February 1967. p. 79.
  5. ^ a b "Country Roads Board Victoria. Sixtieth Annual Report: for the year ended 30 June 1973". Country Roads Board of Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 1 November 1973. p. 5.
  6. ^ "Country Roads Board Victoria. Sixty-First Annual Report: for the year ended 30 June 1974". Country Roads Board of Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 1 November 1974. p. 4.
  7. ^ a b "Country Roads Board Victoria. Sixty-Fourth Annual Report: for the year ended 30 June 1977". Country Roads Board of Victoria. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 30 September 1977. p. 7.
  8. ^ a b "VicRoads Annual Report 2011-12". VicRoads. Melbourne: Victorian Government Library Service. 18 September 2012. p. 7.
  9. ^ Country Roads Board Victoria. Sixty-Fifth Annual Report: for the year ended 30th June, 1978, Burwood, Victoria: Brown, Prior, Anderson, 1978. p. 9.
  10. ^ State Government of Victoria. "Road Management Act 2004" (PDF). Government of Victoria. Archived (PDF) from the original on 18 October 2021. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  11. ^ a b VicRoads. "VicRoads – Register of Public Roads (Part A) 2015" (PDF). Government of Victoria. p. 20. Archived from the original on 1 May 2020. Retrieved 19 October 2021.