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M4 Western Motorway

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M4 Western Motorway
Length 46 km
Direction West-East
Start Great Western Highway, Lapstone, New South Wales
Primary destinations Penrith, Blacktown, Parramatta
End Parramatta Road, North Strathfield, Sydney
Construction dates 1970s - 1993
Major junctions The Northern Road
WestLink
Silverwater Road
Homebush Bay Drive
Owner Roads and Traffic Authority (RTA), State Wide Roads (SWR)
Operator SWR Operations Pty Limited, RTA

The M4 Western Motorway,[1][2][3], (also known as the M4 Motorway or simply M4) is a motorway in central Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It forms part of Sydney Metroad 4.[4]

The Western Motorway is a partially-tolled motorway, with a toll plaza near Silverwater. It is only necessary to pay a toll if travelling on the motorway between James Ruse Drive and Silverwater Road, and it is possible to use the majority of the motorway without paying the toll.

The Motorway is mostly 6 lanes wide, and carries constant heavy traffic during daylight hours, seven days a week. Built as a four lane motorway, it was widened to six lanes during 1998 to 2000, but this did little to ease the congestion. Widening the motorway any further would probably not help, as without the M4 East extension (see below), the congestion would just move further east, where traffic is deposited onto surface streets at Strathfield.

Originally planned in the mid 1950s to start in the CBD[5], the eastern section was only built as far west as Pyrmont as part of the North West Expressway, or F3, a freeway that would connect the Sydney and Newcastle central business districts. This section is now part of the Western Distributor. From there it was to have joined with the Western Expressway, the F4, and the Southern Expressway, the F6, in Glebe.[6]

On the basis of a pre-election promise made by the Premier of New South Wales Neville Wran in 1976, all land reserved for the expressway between Pyrmont and the current eastern termination point at Strathfield was sold off to property developers or declassified as a freeway corridor in 1977 by the State Government. The proposed expressway ran through the seat held by the Premier Wran.

Contents

[edit] M4 East

M4, view east from footbridge at Silverwater

A major extension to the M4 has been proposed and has well-advanced plans[7]. This extension would extend the M4 beyond its current end in Strathfield[8] by approximately five kilometres, so that it would subsequently end in Ashfield and be continuous with the City West Link. Further planned upgrades to the City West Link would mean commuters going west out of the city could get to Parramatta without passing through traffic lights. The NSW Government recently outlined a $7 billion plan to link the M4, Victoria Road, City West Link and Sydney Airport using a network of underground tunnels.

As of April 2005, the NSW state government has shelved plans for the M4 East extension, citing the need for an integrated plan for transport, but possibly to mitigate residents in affected suburbs which would have been affected by increased traffic had the M4 East link been approved. Future plans may include instead a continuous traffic-light-free link from the city's Western Distributor to the current end of the M4.

The lack of this link is currently causing major problems for any commercial traffic wishing to travel between Port Botany and the many factories and warehouses in the western suburbs. The M5 South Western Motorway does connect directly to Port Botany, but it has chronic congestion problems of its own, and doesn't provide easy access to inner western areas of Sydney. There is so much demand for this link, that traffic not only uses the designated Metroad 4 (Parramatta Road), but also several back streets to the north and south, most of which are 2 lane residential streets.

[edit] Exits and Interchanges

Western Motorway
Westbound exits Distance to
Lithgow
(km)
Distance to
Sydney
(km)
Eastbound exits
End Western Motorway
continues as Great Western Highway
to Katoomba / Lithgow / Bathurst
84 58 Start Western Motorway
from Great Western Highway
Lapstone
Governors Drive
85 -- no exit
Leonay, Emu Plains
Leonay Parade
Russell Street
87 55 Emu Plains, Leonay
Russell Street
Leonay Parade
Mulgoa, Penrith
Mulgoa Road
90 52 Penrith, Mulgoa
Mulgoa Road
Campbelltown, Windsor
The Northern Road
93 49 Windsor, Campbelltown
The Northern Road
Liverpool, St Marys
Mamre Road
97 45 St Marys, Liverpool
Mamre Road
St Clair, Colyton
Erskine Park Road
Roper Road
101 -- no exit
Canberra, Newcastle, Brisbane
WestLink Sydney (Kingsford Smith) Airport
105 37 Liverpool, Rooty Hill
Wallgrove Road
Rooty Hill, Liverpool
Wallgrove Road
Brisbane, Newcastle, Canberra
WestLink Sydney (Kingsford Smith) Airport
Caltex Service Centre 107 35 Caltex Service Centre
Blacktown
Reservoir Road
109 33 Blacktown
Reservoir Road
Blacktown, Seven Hills
Prospect Highway
111 31 Blacktown, Seven Hills
Prospect Highway
Smithfield, Wentworthville, Hornsby,
Cumberland Highway
114 28 Smithfield, Wentworthville, Hornsby,
Cumberland Highway
South Wentworthville, Westmead
Coleman Street
116 -- no exit
Merrylands, Parramatta
Burnett Street
118 -- no exit
no exit -- 22 Parramatta, Auburn, Villawood
Parramatta Road
Woodville Road
Seven Hills, Windsor
James Ruse Drive
121 21 Seven Hills, Windsor
James Ruse Drive
TOLL PLAZA 123 19 TOLL PLAZA
Newcastle, Hornsby, Carlingford, Bankstown, Menai, Wollongong
Silverwater Road
124 18 Newcastle, Hornsby, Carlingford, Bankstown, Menai, Wollongong
Silverwater Road
no exit -- 16 Homebush Bay
Hill Road
Hurstville, Ryde, Mona Vale
Homebush Bay Drive / Centenary Drive Sydney (Kingsford Smith) Airport
127 15 Mona Vale<Ryde, Hurstville
Homebush Bay Drive / Centenary Drive Sydney (Kingsford Smith) Airport
no exit -- 13 Concord, Strathfield
Concord Road
Start Western Motorway
from Parramatta Road
130 12 End Western Motorway
continues as Parramatta Road
to Sydney

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Western Motorway (M4) Ozroads: the Australian Roads Website. Retrieved on 29 August 2008.
  2. ^ Historic Photos, Ozroads: the Australian Roads Website. Retrieved on 29 August 2008.
  3. ^ M4 Photos Today, Ozroads: the Australian Roads Website. Retrieved on 29 August 2008.
  4. ^ SWR M4 Motorway website, M4 Motorway Website. Retrieved on 29 August 2008.
  5. ^ Western Motorway (M4) Construction, Ozroads: the Australian Roads Website. Retrieved on 29 August 2008.
  6. ^ The M4 Motorway - a history and exit guide, Geocities. Retrieved on 29 August 2008.
  7. ^ M4 East extension - Roads and Traffic Authority. Retrieved on 29 August 2008.
  8. ^ RTA traffic webcams - Roads and Traffic Authority. Retrieved on 29 August 2008.
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