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Old Coast Road

Forrest Highway
Western Australia
Map
Map of Forrest Highway, highlighted in red, and surrounding road network between Perth and Bunbury
Type Highway
Length 95.67 km (59.45 mi)
Opened 20 September 2009
History Old Coast Road opened 1842
Route number(s)
North end Kwinana Freeway (State Route 2), Ravenswood
 
  • Pinjarra Road
  • Old Coast Road (National Route 1), Lake Clifton
  • Old Coast Road (Tourist Drive 260), Pelican Point
South end Robertson Drive (National Route 1 / State Route 10), East Bunbury
Major settlements South Yunderup, Lake Clifton, Myalup, Binningup, Leschenault, Australind
External audio
Forrest Highway: One year after opening – interviews
Main Roads regional manager Brett Bellstead (MP3)
Harvey Shire president Peter Monagle (MP3)

Harvey cheese maker Robert St Duke (MP3)

Radio interviews conducted by ABC South West WA presenter Ron Tait.
Old Coast Road
Location: MandurahLake Clifton
Length: 44.3 km (27.5 mi)
Route number: National Route 1
Old Coast Road
Location: LeschenaultPelican Point
Length: 11.7 km (7.3 mi)
Route number: Tourist Drive 260

Forrest Highway is a 95-kilometre-long (59 mi) highway in Western Australia's Peel and South West regions, extending Perth's Kwinana Freeway from east of Mandurah down to Bunbury. Old Coast Road was the original Mandurah–Bunbury route, dating back to the 1840s. Part of that road, and the Australind Bypass around Australind and Eaton, were subsumed by Forrest Highway. The highway begins at Kwinana Freeway's southern terminus in Ravenswood, continues around the Peel Inlet to Lake Clifton, and heads south to finish at Bunbury's Eelup Roundabout. There are a number of at-grade intersections with minor roads in the shires of Murray, Waroona, and Harvey including Greenlands Road and Old Bunbury Road, both of which connect to South Western Highway near Pinjarra.

The settlement of Australind by the Western Australian Land Company in 1840–41 prompted the first real need for a good quality road to Perth. A coastal Australind–Mandurah route was completed by 2 November 1842. Though the road was rebuilt by convicts in the 1850s, its importance was already declining. With a new road via Pinjarra at the foothills of the Darling Scarp completed in 1876, and the opening of the Perth−Bunbury railway in 1893, few people travelled up the old coastal road. In the late 1930s there was a proposal to re-establish the road as a tourist route, which could also reduce traffic on the main road along the foothills, but it was put on hold due to World War II. Improvements to Old Coast Road started in the early 1950s, but with little progress made until 1954 when the Main Roads Department approved £1000 worth of works. The name "Old Coast Road" was formally adopted on 27 January 1959, and a sealed road was completed in September 1969.


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Wikipedia

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