Capital Circle
Capital Circle is a circular road surrounding Capital Hill in the centre of Canberra, Australia's capital city. It is one of three concentric roads on the hill, with State Circle the outermost and Parliament Drive the innermost. There are no buildings on Capital Circle. Parliament Drive surrounds New Parliament House.
Capital Circle | |||||
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Capital Circle is the inner of two circular concentric roads that orbit Parliament House. | |||||
Capital Circle Location of Capital Circle in the Australian Capital Territory | |||||
Coordinates | |||||
General information | |||||
Type | Freeway | ||||
Length | 2.4 km (1.5 mi) | ||||
Route number(s) |
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Ring road around | Capital Hill | ||||
Major junctions | |||||
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North end |
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Canberra Avenue (A23)[1] | |||||
West end | |||||
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West end | |||||
North end |
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Highway system | |||||
Roads named for each of Australia's state capitals converge at Capital Circle or State Circle. The main roads leading from the circle are Commonwealth Avenue to the north and Canberra Avenue and Adelaide Avenue to the south.
Design
Capital Circle is a three-lane road. All traffic runs in a clockwise direction. A short section under Federation Mall is in tunnel. The road does not form a complete circle, as a section under Commonwealth Avenue was closed a few years after opening due to the high number of crashes apparently resulting partly from the closeness of the entrance from Commonwealth Avenue and the exit to Kings Avenue. Vehicles are now forced to exit at Commonwealth Avenue.
See also
Australian Roads portal
References
- "Guide Signs MIS 12" (PDF). ACT Government. April 2019. p. 13. Retrieved 9 June 2020.