Tapleys Hill Road

Tapleys Hill Road
South Australia
General information
Type Road
Length 13 km (8.1 mi)
Route number(s) A15
Major junctions
North end Port Road, Queenstown, Adelaide
  Sir Donald Bradman Drive, Adelaide
South end Anzac Highway, Glenelg, Adelaide
Location(s)
Major suburbs Seaton, Fulham Gardens, Fulham, Lockleys, West Beach, Glenelg North

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Tapleys Hill Road is a major arterial road in the western suburbs of Adelaide, Australia.[1]

Tapleys Hill Road passes through the City of Port Adelaide Enfield, City of Charles Sturt, City of West Torrens and City of Holdfast Bay.

Places of interest located on Tapleys Hill Road include Royal Adelaide Golf Course, Adelaide Shores Golf Park and Harbour Town.

Prior to an upgrade in the 1990s, Tapleys Hill Road's southern end was joined to Anzac Highway about 100 metres to the west of where it currently lays.[2] The upgrade involved re-aligning the roadway, and taking Tapleys Hill Road to Brighton Road's northern end, removing congestion in a busy area. The old roadway still exists, now named as Old Tapleys Hill Road, and is rarely used as a through route, servicing mainly residents of the area.

Tapleys Hill, on which the Victoria Hotel stands, was named for Thomas Tapley (1789–1856) who arrived in South Australia aboard the Rajahstan in November 1838 and took up land in that location,[3] which however bears little relation to the current road.

Route A15 has its northern end at Port Road and includes Tapleys Hill Road. It continues past the sotuthern end of Tapleys Hill Road on Brighton Road, then Ocean Boulevard, Lonsdale Road and Dyson Road. It continues through Port Noarlunga on parts of Murray Road, Gawler Street, Gray Street, Saltfleet Street and Commercial Road.

See also

Australian roads portal

References

  1. 2003 Adelaide Street Directory, 41st Edition. UBD (A Division of Universal Press Pty Ltd). 2003. ISBN 0-7319-1441-4.
  2. Adelaide Street Directory, 28th Edition. Adelaide: UBD. 1990. ISBN 0-7319-0115-0.
  3. "Manning index to South Australia". State library of South Australia. Retrieved 1 February 2016.

34°51′49″S 138°30′52″E / 34.863500°S 138.514378°E / -34.863500; 138.514378


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