[U/C] M2 North-South Motorway
[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
You lot need to calm your farms. It's going to be a tunnel. End of story. There is no further argument.
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[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
It won't be a tunnel.Shuz wrote:You lot need to calm your farms. It's going to be a tunnel. End of story. There is no further argument.
ChillyPhilly wrote:
This is a whip-up I did a while ago, based on the preferences listed by the Scoping Report.
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[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
I remember reading that. Looks good. Was there ever a reason given for the elevated road from Edward St to Daw's Road? Would prefer a trench the whole way - but I'm sure there's plenty of time for those things to be changed anyway.
I think they had an option to include grade separating the rail line from Cross Road at the Cross Road / South Road intersection as well, so hopefully that happens.
I think they had an option to include grade separating the rail line from Cross Road at the Cross Road / South Road intersection as well, so hopefully that happens.
[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
It would possibly be a more expensive solution, but one way to keep the corridor narrower would be to partially stack the continuous and local roads.That is what is achieved through the very high Superway north of Regency Road.I'm not sure what height and access constraints led to that elevated road. I wonder if a simpler version could be achieved by putting the through road in a trench, and cantilevering the local roads over the top. If each direction has three lanes in the trench and only two surface lanes, then there is scope for an opening in the middle which provides natural light and avoids some of the complexities that a true tunnel introduces, such as ventilation. The construction does not have to be strict cantilever engineering, as it would be possible to have beams that span the entire width (maybe even with a support in the middle).
Have I missed an obvious reason why this could not be possible, particularly in the areas where a wide corridor is not wanted?
Have I missed an obvious reason why this could not be possible, particularly in the areas where a wide corridor is not wanted?
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[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
A bit like one of the original plans for the T2T section: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2ps0tiSBD wrote: ↑Tue Dec 12, 2017 4:09 pmIt would possibly be a more expensive solution, but one way to keep the corridor narrower would be to partially stack the continuous and local roads.That is what is achieved through the very high Superway north of Regency Road.I'm not sure what height and access constraints led to that elevated road. I wonder if a simpler version could be achieved by putting the through road in a trench, and cantilevering the local roads over the top. If each direction has three lanes in the trench and only two surface lanes, then there is scope for an opening in the middle which provides natural light and avoids some of the complexities that a true tunnel introduces, such as ventilation. The construction does not have to be strict cantilever engineering, as it would be possible to have beams that span the entire width (maybe even with a support in the middle).
Have I missed an obvious reason why this could not be possible, particularly in the areas where a wide corridor is not wanted?
[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
Yes, that explains why I didn't think it was an original thought, but I couldn't remember having actually seen it anywhere else.Llessur2002 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 12, 2017 4:15 pmA bit like one of the original plans for the T2T section: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2ps0tiSBD wrote: ↑Tue Dec 12, 2017 4:09 pmIt would possibly be a more expensive solution, but one way to keep the corridor narrower would be to partially stack the continuous and local roads.That is what is achieved through the very high Superway north of Regency Road.I'm not sure what height and access constraints led to that elevated road. I wonder if a simpler version could be achieved by putting the through road in a trench, and cantilevering the local roads over the top. If each direction has three lanes in the trench and only two surface lanes, then there is scope for an opening in the middle which provides natural light and avoids some of the complexities that a true tunnel introduces, such as ventilation. The construction does not have to be strict cantilever engineering, as it would be possible to have beams that span the entire width (maybe even with a support in the middle).
Have I missed an obvious reason why this could not be possible, particularly in the areas where a wide corridor is not wanted?
[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
Castle plaza area is to be elevated due to contaminated soil, same was said for Wingfield.
Wingfield is also much closer to the ocean, the northern connector is raised due to the ocean.
Torrens to Anzac will be trench as it is cost effective and good outcome.
Tunnels are needed to save significant buildings.
T2t abandoned stacked road due to costs. It was cheaper to buy land than build. Also road closures would be required to build(but unacceptable), south rd needs 2 lanes each direction open.
The same is likely true for the Torrens to Anzac area.
Wingfield is also much closer to the ocean, the northern connector is raised due to the ocean.
Torrens to Anzac will be trench as it is cost effective and good outcome.
Tunnels are needed to save significant buildings.
T2t abandoned stacked road due to costs. It was cheaper to buy land than build. Also road closures would be required to build(but unacceptable), south rd needs 2 lanes each direction open.
The same is likely true for the Torrens to Anzac area.
[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
IIRC there was a study done about 5 years ago which showed that the cost of building an elevated road (e.g. the Superway) was less than the cost of a trench.
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[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
Still on the topic of the Scoping Report, this one is a biggie.
Click here to view the report: https://www.infrastructure.sa.gov.au/__ ... rategy.pdfA review of the services work to date from the planning studies identified that there was only one
major piece of services infrastructure that would significantly impact the program timeframe being the
Telstra Exchange near Cross Road (approximately 5 years to relocate). The relocation of the
exchange needs to be funded as an associated works project five years in advance of the funded road
project. Alternatively further design work needs to be undertaken to determine options to avoid the
need to relocate the exchange.
Our state, our city, our future.
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[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
The reality is that no work will get done on the North-South Corridor unless it is funded by the Federal Government. A report by the Grattan Institute http://www.harley.net.au/temp/Transport ... omises.pdf makes it clear that all of the political parties are suspect when it comes to promises of funding for transport projects.rev wrote: ↑Tue Dec 12, 2017 12:03 pmIf Labor gets back in, it'll get done.
If Liberals get in, work will stop, or it'll be botched in another one way motorway example.
If Xenophon gets in, he'd probably cave and build them the worlds most expensive tunnel and gets dressed up as a tunnel boring machine for the opening.
1. Both disproportionally promise a lot for Qld but little for SA.
2. None pay much attention to Infrastructure Australia approval.
3.The LNP Coalition tends to choose road over rail more than Labor does.
So, if you want the South Road upgrade to be funded, convert more SA seats into marginal seats so we get the same attention as Qld!
[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
Spot on. Have been thinking this myself as the obvious option in bottleneck areas.SBD wrote:It would possibly be a more expensive solution, but one way to keep the corridor narrower would be to partially stack the continuous and local roads.That is what is achieved through the very high Superway north of Regency Road.I'm not sure what height and access constraints led to that elevated road. I wonder if a simpler version could be achieved by putting the through road in a trench, and cantilevering the local roads over the top. If each direction has three lanes in the trench and only two surface lanes, then there is scope for an opening in the middle which provides natural light and avoids some of the complexities that a true tunnel introduces, such as ventilation. The construction does not have to be strict cantilever engineering, as it would be possible to have beams that span the entire width (maybe even with a support in the middle).
Have I missed an obvious reason why this could not be possible, particularly in the areas where a wide corridor is not wanted?
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[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
A few photos from the Torrens to Torrens project
View from Torrens Road bridge
View from the footbridge near Hawker Street
Looking a bit closer, you can see the motorway off-ramp taking shape
Here is a typical section of the south-bound surface road
ITS equipment is now starting to pop up, here are the travel time signs on Port Road, first heading to the Port, the second one to the city (I don't know why they shortened Expressway when they have so much space!)
Some photos of Croydon Station and its surrounds. Not sure if the station will be done in just 20 days!
View from Torrens Road bridge
View from the footbridge near Hawker Street
Looking a bit closer, you can see the motorway off-ramp taking shape
Here is a typical section of the south-bound surface road
ITS equipment is now starting to pop up, here are the travel time signs on Port Road, first heading to the Port, the second one to the city (I don't know why they shortened Expressway when they have so much space!)
Some photos of Croydon Station and its surrounds. Not sure if the station will be done in just 20 days!
Last edited by Norman on Tue Dec 26, 2017 11:24 am, edited 2 times in total.
[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
And here is a video of the whole corridor. It took me 66 minutes to drive from Old Noarlunga to Gawler, but the video shows it in just over 8 minutes
https://youtu.be/dZ7v3Jx9OiU
https://youtu.be/dZ7v3Jx9OiU
[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
Very cool!
Any views and opinions expressed are of my own, and do not reflect the views or opinions of any organisation of which I have an affiliation with.
[U/C] Re: News & Discussion: South Road / North-South Corridor
The comparative speed of vehicles on the SEXY was interesting. Don't you just love those drivers who speed past you in an adjacent lane, change into your lane and then slow down to the same, or slower, speed as you! They have a real Michael Schumacher complex!Norman wrote: ↑Tue Dec 26, 2017 9:37 amAnd here is a video of the whole corridor. It took me 66 minutes to drive from Old Noarlunga to Gawler, but the video shows it in just over 8 minutes
https://youtu.be/dZ7v3Jx9OiU
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