M8 Motorway (Sydney)

The M8 Motorway is a motorway in Sydney, Australia. The first and only stage of the M8 open to traffic is the WestConnex M8, previously known as the New M5 during planning and construction.

Westconnex M8

General information
TypeMotorway
Length9 km (5.6 mi)
Opened5 July 2020
Route number(s)
Major junctions
West end
 
East end
Highway system

The WestConnex M8 is a 9-kilometre-long (5.6 mi) tolled motorway that links the M5 Motorway at Kingsgrove to St Peters Interchange.[1] It consists predominantly of tunnels, and includes tunnel connections to the future M4–M5 Link (the second stage of M8) and the future M6 Motorway. Planned and constructed as part of the WestConnex project, WestConnex tolls are applied to the motorway. It is one of the longest road tunnels in Australia along with the NorthConnex.

Construction of the M8 motorway began in July 2016 and the WestConnex M8 stage opened on 5 July 2020 at an estimated project cost of A$4.335 billion.[1] Future stages of the M8 motorway will open in 2023 and after 2026, to connect with the A8 in the Northern Beaches via the M4–M5 Link, Rozelle Interchange and Western Harbour Tunnel & Beaches Link.[2]

Route

Travelling westbound through the M8 tunnel

From its western end at Kingsgrove, the route branches out of the M5 corridor and travels parallel to the M5 East. The route then curves to the north and runs parallel to Princes Highway before terminating at St Peters Interchange in St Peters, with further connections towards the Eastern Suburbs via Euston Road and Gardeners Road, and towards Sydney Airport via the proposed Sydney Gateway.[1]

The WestConnex M8 (first stage of M8) does not have any intermediate exits. However, tunnel connections to the future M6 Motorway towards Southern Sydney and Wollongong have already been built.[3]

The M8 is currently marked at two lanes in each direction, with capacity for a third lane to be added if required.[4]

St Peters Interchange

St Peters Interchange under construction

St Peters Interchange opened to traffic when M8 opened on 5 July 2020. It was built on the site of the former Alexandria Landfill waste facility.[5]

When fully completed in 2024, the St Peters Interchange will be an interchange of five different roads, namely:

Bridges and tunnel entrances/exits to the M4–M5 Link and Sydney Gateway have already been completed when the M8 and the interchange opened. The final bridge of the St Peters Interchange was put in place in October 2019.[6]

Exits and interchanges

LGALocationkm[1][7]miDestinationsNotes
Canterbury-BankstownKingsgrove00.0 M5 Motorway (west)  Liverpool, Campbelltown M8 Motorway western terminus;
Road continues as M5 Motorway
Tunnel western terminus
BaysideArncliffe6.13.8M6 Motorway (south)  Kogarah, Miranda, SutherlandProposed;
M6 Motorway northern terminus;
Northbound entrance and southbound exit only
Cooks River6.54.0Cooks River tunnel
Inner WestSt Peters95.6Tunnel eastern terminus and toll eastern terminus
Euston Road (north)  Alexandria, Waterloo, Randwick
Gardeners Road (east)  Mascot, Kingsford
Campbell Road (west)  Sydenham, Newtown
Campbell Road (east)  Alexandria, Mascot
St Peters Interchange;
M8 Motorway eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Toll

Motorists are charged WestConnex distance-based tolls to use the twin tunnels. The toll charge consists of:

Tolls for heavy vehicles are triple of cars and motorcycles. Toll prices increase by 4% or the consumer price index (CPI) every year, whichever is greater, until 2040, after which CPI will apply.[8]

Toll prices as of 1 January 2021[9]
Toll roadToll typeClass A flagfall[lower-alpha 1]Class A charge per km[lower-alpha 1]Class A maximum toll or cap[lower-alpha 1]Class B toll prices[lower-alpha 1]Toll increase[11]Toll concessionaireExpiry of toll concession[12]
M8 Motorway Distance-based $1.42 $0.5266 $7.23 3 x of Class A prices Annually on 1 January, by the greater of CPI or 4% until December 2040, then by CPI only WestConnex 2060
  1. Class A vehicles are typically cars and motorcycles; Class B vehicles are all other vehicles including trucks and heavy vehicles[10]

History

New M5

In 2009, the government released the M5 Transport Corridor Feasibility Study, which investigated strategic options for improving the M5 Motorway corridor. The study identified a preliminary preferred option, being the M5 East Duplication, consisted of duplicating the M5 East and construction of a new connection from the M5 East at Arncliffe to Euston Road, Qantas Drive and Gardeners Road.[13] The strategic concept for the M5 East Duplication was placed on public exhibition between November 2009 and March 2010 for community and stakeholder feedback. Feedback received was used to further develop and refine the scheme. In 2012, the scheme become the King Georges Road Interchange Upgrade and New M5 projects, the second stage of WestConnex. The New M5 would consist of separate tunnels parallel to the M5 East tunnels.

The New M5 had the potential to impact the critically endangered Cooks River/Castlereagh Ironbark ecological community and the green and golden bell frog, which are listed under the Commonwealth Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Act 1999. Environmental approval[1] from the federal Minister for the Environment was granted on 11 July 2016 and construction commenced later that month.[14][15] On 3 June 2020, M8 was revealed as the new name and route designation for the New M5, and it opened on 5 July 2020.[2]

Route numbering

M8 Motorway signage concept at Rozelle Interchange

The M8 Motorway was first named in Section 300-2 of the Road Rules 2014, as amended in 2019, to be the tunnels between Beverly Hills and St Peters, and St Peters and Rozelle Interchange.[16] The modification report for The Crescent overpass released in April 2020 showed an image of the proposed signage "M8 North Sydney", indicating that M8 is to continue from Rozelle Interchange towards North Sydney via the Western Harbour Tunnel.[17] The official announcement of the M8 route designation in June 2020 confirmed that M8 will further continue along the Beaches Link Tunnel and connect with the A8 in the Northern Beaches.[2]

The next section of the M8 to open, currently known as the M4-M5 Link, is the third stage of the Westconnex project and has a long history in similar forms. It was previously known as the “M4 South”[18] and follows much of the alignment of the Inner West Motorway which originally formed the northern end of the F6 Freeway in the 1948 Cumberland County Plan to build an inner-city bypass and link the airport and shipping terminals.

See also

References

  1. "WestConnex M8". WestConnex. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  2. "New driver animations - As work ramps up on New M5 Tunnels" (Press release). WestConnex. 3 June 2020. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  3. "F6 Extension Stage 1 - New M5 Motorway at Arncliffe to President Avenue at Kogarah" (PDF). Transport for NSW: Roads and Maritime. NSW Government. June 2018. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
  4. "WestConnex M8". WestConnex. Retrieved 8 July 2020.
  5. "Remediation and closure of Alexandria Landfill, St Peters" (PDF). WestConnex. 4 October 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 April 2018.
  6. "Final Piece in Place on New M5 Bridges" (Press release). WestConnex. 4 October 2019. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  7. "East Cut Kingsgrove to St Peters". Google Maps. 2020. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  8. "Tolling". WestConnex. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  9. "Toll charges – costs by toll road". Transport for NSW - Roads and Maritime. Retrieved 5 January 2021.
  10. "What is my vehicle class?". Linkt. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  11. "When and how do toll prices increase". Linkt. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  12. "Road tolling in New South Wales" (PDF). New South Wales Parliament. Portfolio Committee No.2 – Health and Community Services. October 2017. Retrieved 30 October 2020.
  13. "WestConnex New M5 - Environmental Impact Statement - Chapter 4". WestConnex. November 2015. p. 4-5. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  14. Hunt, Greg (11 July 2016). "Federal Government approves Stage 2 of WestConnex motorway" (PDF) (Press release). Department of the Environment. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 July 2016.
  15. "Cooks River/Castlereagh Ironbark Forest of the Sydney Basin Bioregion". Department of the Environment and Energy. Archived from the original on 29 July 2016.
  16. "Road Rules 2014 Act as amended November 2019". Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  17. "Modification: The Crescent overpass and active transport Design amendment report". Major Projects - Department of Planning, Industry and Environment. April 2020. p. 56. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  18. "WestConnex State Significant Infrastructure Application Report". November 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.