A6 (Sydney)


The A6 is a route designation of a major metropolitan arterial route through suburban Sydney, linking Cumberland Highway at and Princes Highway at, via Lidcombe and Bankstown. This name covers a few consecutive roads and is widely known to most drivers, but the entire allocation is also known – and signposted – by the names of its constituent parts: Marsden Road, Stewart Street, Kissing Point Road, Silverwater Road, St Hilliers Road, Boorea Street, Olympic Drive, Joseph Street, Rookwood Road, Stacey Street, Fairford Road, Davies Road, Alfords Point Road, New Illawarra Road and Heathcote Road.

Route

The A6 commences at the intersection of Cumberland Highway at Carlingford and heads in a southerly direction as Marsden Road as a two-lane, single carriageway road, before changing name to Stewart Street at Dundas Valley and heading west, widening to a four-lane, dual-carriageway road. It intersects with and changes name to Kissing Point Road, and then nearly immediately changing name again to Silverwater Road at Dundas and heads south, crossing over Victoria Road at an interchange in Ermington, crossing Parramatta River over Silverwater Bridge and widening to a six-lane, dual-carriageway just south of the river in Silverwater, meeting M4 Motorway at Auburn and then Great Western Highway shortly afterwards. It changes name to St Hilliers Road and continues southwest, then along Boorea Street heading east, then changes name again to Olympic Drive shortly afterwards and heads in a southerly direction to Lidcombe, changing name again to Joseph Street and Rookwood Road through Potts Hill, before changing name again to Stacey Street and narrowing to a four-lane, dual-carriageway road just before it meets Hume Highway at Chullora. It continues south, changing name to Fairford Road at Punchbowl, crossing over Canterbury Road at an interchange and then meeting M5 South Western Motorway shortly afterwards at Padstow, widening to a six-lane, dual-carriageway road. It changes name to Davies Road soon after, then again to Alfords Point Road at Padstow Heights, and crosses Georges River, narrowing to a four-lane, single-carriageway road at Alfords Point, and meets Old Illawarra Road at Menai, changing name to New Illawarra Road. It intersects with and changes name for the final time to Heathcote Road at Lucas Heights, before eventually terminating at the intersection with Princes Highway at Heathcote.

History

The passing of the Main Roads Act of 1924 through the Parliament of New South Wales provided for the declaration of Main Roads, roads partially funded by the State government through the Main Roads Board. Main Road no. 158 was declared from Kissing Point Road in Ermington along Marsden Road to the intersection with Pennant Hills Road in Carlingford, and Main Road No. 190 was declared from the intersection with Great Western Highway in Lidcombe, via John Street, Church Street, Railway Parade, East Street, Victoria Street and Rookwood Road to the intersection with Hume Highway at Bankstown, on the same day, 8 August 1928; with the passing of the Main Roads Act of 1929 to provide for additional declarations of State Highways and Trunk Roads, these was amended to Main Roads 158 and 190 on 8 April 1929. Main Road 512 was declared along Heathcote Road on 15 November 1939, between Lucas Heights and Princes Highway at Heathcote.
The Department of Main Roads constructed a number of defense routes during World War II, including Heathcote Road and a new road between Lucas Heights and Heathcote Road, bypassing the causeway crossing of the Woronora River at The Needles; these projects were completed during 1941.
Main Road 532 was declared on 25 June 1947 along Sutherland Street, between its intersection with Great Western Highway at Auburn and the Parramatta River. Main Road 532A was declared on 4 May 1949 along Spurway Street, between Kissing Point Road in Dundas and Marsden Road in Dundas; this was replaced by Main Road 574 on 1 October 1951.
Spurway Street was later renamed Stewart Street, and Sutherland Street was later renamed Silverwater Road, on the same day, 6 August 1952; Main Road 512 was later renamed Heathcote Road, on 27 July 1955.
The road project to bypass Lidcombe station to the west and connect to Bridge Street was completed in 1955, with the route realigned again to reach Great Western Highway via Olympic Drive and St Hilliers Road instead on 2 May 1962. When the Silverwater Bridge over the Parramatta River was completed in 1962, the northern end of Main Road 532 was extended to cross the bridge to reach the intersection with Victoria Road in Ermington on 22 February 1967. A new bridge over the railway line east of Bankstown connecting both halves of Stacey Street was completed in 1970, and the completion of Alfords Point Bridge over the Georges River in 1973 extended the route further south from Padstow to Lucas Heights.
The route underwent further realignments: the Lidcombe bypass, connecting a new alignment from Victoria Street to Olympic Drive where it met at Bridge Street, opened in 1982. The northern end of Main Road 190 was extended northwards and re-aligned southwards, on 15 February 1991, then extended south again along Alfords Point Road and New and Old Illawarra Roads to Heathcote Road at Lucas Heights, on 22 January 1993.
The Silverwater Road extension from Ermington to Dundas opened in 1996, allowing through traffic along Stewart Street and Marsden Road to Cumberland Highway in Carlingford. In 1999 Stacey Street was extended north to directly connect with Rookwood Road at Chullora, bypassing the dog-leg via Hume Highway between these two roads.
The passing of the Roads Act of 1993 updated road classifications and the way they could be declared within New South Wales. Under this act, the A6 retains its declaration as Main Road 190, and part of Main Roads 158, 512, and 574.
The route was allocated State Route 45 in 1974, from Victoria Road in to Princes Highway in, extended to Carlingford when the Silverwater extension opened in 1996. It was replaced in its entirely by Metroad 6 in January 1999. When Metroad 7 along Cumberland Highway was replaced by Westlink M7 on its opening in December 2005, Metroad 6 was extended northwards along Pennant Hills Road to the interchange with M2 Hills Motorway. Metroad 6 was realigned between Menai and Barden Ridge, from Old Illawarra Road onto New Illawarra Road, completed between 2005–11 as part of the Bangor Bypass project. With the conversion to the newer alphanumeric system in 2013, Metroad 6 was replaced by route A6, with the previous extension along Pennant Hills Road truncated back to Carlingford.

Future

In 2019, the New South Wales Government announced it would rename the northern extension of the Princes Motorway, between Arncliffe and Kogarah to the "M6 Motorway". No announcement has yet been made on whether the A6 will be renumbered to avoid duplicate numbers.

Major intersections