Churchill Road – Wikipedia

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Churchill Road (and its northern section as Churchill Road North) is an arterial road in the inner northern suburbs of Adelaide, Australia.

Churchill Road North commences at the intersection of Port Wakefield Road and Montague Roads in Cavan and heads southwest and south to the intersection of Grand Junction and Cavan Roads. Heading directly south as Churchill Road, it travels through Kilburn and Prospect, before meeting with Torrens Road in Ovingham.[3]

Churchill Road was previously known as Lower North Road.[4]

Major intersections[edit]

LGA[5] Location[1][3] km[1] mi Destinations Notes
Salisbury Cavan 0.0 0.0 Montague Road – Pooraka, Modbury Northern terminus of Churchill Road North
Port Wakefield Road (A1) – Waterloo Corner, Gepps Cross, Medindie
Port Adelaide Enfield Dry Creek 2.0 1.2 Cormack Road – Wingfield
Dry Creek-Gepps Cross boundary 3.0 1.9 Cavan Road (A22) – Gepps Cross Route A22 continues northeast along Cavan Road
Dry Creek-Gepps Cross-Kilburn tripoint 3.1 1.9 Grand Junction Road (A16) – Port Adelaide, Northfield, Hope Valley Name change: Churchill Road North (north), Churchill Road (south)
Prospect Prospect 5.9 3.7 Regency Road – Kilkenny, Broadview, Hampstead Gardens
Prospect-Charles Sturt boundary Ovingham 8.5 5.3 Torrens Road (A22) – Kilkenny, Rosewater Southern terminus of Churchill Road, route A22 continues southeast along Torrens Road
  •       Route transition

See also[edit]

icon Australian roads portal

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c

    Google (20 June 2022). “Churchill Road (North)” (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 20 June 2022.

  2. ^ “Location SA Map viewer with regional layers”. Government of South Australia. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  3. ^ a b “Location SA Map viewer with suburb layers”. Government of South Australia. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  4. ^ “Map 35” (Map). Gregory’s Street Directory of Adelaide and Suburbs. 1949. Archived from the original on 11 January 2017. Retrieved 19 May 2016 – via OSM Australia.
  5. ^ “Location SA Map viewer with LGA layers”. Government of South Australia. Retrieved 16 June 2022.

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