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Bass Highway (Tasmania) : ウィキペディア英語版
Bass Highway, Tasmania

| former = State Route 2〔(Former State Route Numbering System in Tasmania ), ''Ozroads: the Australian Roads Website''. Retrieved on 30 January 2008.〕
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The Bass Highway is a highway in Tasmania, Australia. It is a part of the National Highway, designated as National Highway 1 and connects the major cities across the north of the state - Burnie, Devonport and Launceston.
The route of the highway originally passed through the localities which are now known as:
*Launceston
* Prospect and other Launceston suburbs
* Hadspen
* Carrick
* Hagley
* Westbury
* Exton
*Deloraine
* Elizabeth Town
* Sassafras
* Latrobe
*Devonport
* Forth
* Ulverstone
* Penguin
*Burnie
From here, the highway ceases to be part of the National Highway, but continues as the Bass Highway (A2) through the following towns:
* Somerset
* Wynyard
* Smithton
* Marrawah
==Upgrades==

Since the mid-1970s the highway has undergone significant upgrades that have included bypasses and deviations, duplications and grade separations, particularly between Burnie and Launceston.
On 30 March 1977, ‘stage A’ of the ‘Burnie Highway System’ was opened to traffic. This stage connected the Bass Highway east of the town with Alexander Street by an elevated roadway over the port access road and rail lines.〔Report for year 1976-1977, Parliament of Tasmania, Department of Main Roads, 1978, p. 14〕 Shortly after, on 19 April 1977, the bypass of Devonport was completed with the opening of the final section between Middle Road, Devonport and Don, referred to in that year’s Main Roads Annual Report as the ‘Devonport to Don Freeway’. This section was an extension of the earlier Victoria Bridge project.〔Report for year 1976-1977, Parliament of Tasmania, Department of Main Roads, 1978, p. 13〕
Three years later, the Ulverstone bypass was completed and opened to traffic in August 1980.〔Report for year 1980-1981, Parliament of Tasmania, Department of Main Roads, 1982, p. 20〕
The duplication of the highway from Wivenhoe, east of Burnie, to Chasm Creek was completed during the 1983-84 financial year,〔Report for year 1983-1984, Parliament of Tasmania, Department of Main Roads, 1985, p. 21〕 and was followed in May 1984 with the opening of 500 metres of ‘stage B' of the Burnie Highway System. This section duplicated the highway along North Terrace.〔Report for year 1983-1984, Parliament of Tasmania, Department of Main Roads, 1985, p. 23〕 In September 1986, all four lanes over the complete length of ‘stage B’ of the ‘Burnie Expressway’ (‘Burnie Highway System’) were brought into operation.〔Annual Report 1986-1987, Tasmania, Department of Main Roads, 1987, p. 24〕
Throughout 1986 and 1987, sections of the highway were progressively duplicated and opened to traffic between Don (Devonport) and the Forth River, with the last section completed in June 1987. This was followed by completion of duplication between Forth River and Ulverstone in late 1987.〔Annual Report 1986-1987, Tasmania, Department of Main Roads, 1987, p. 23〕
In 1988, at the eastern terminus of the Bass Highway, a new alignment was opened to connect directly to the then new Launceston Southern Outlet, which itself had opened to traffic in 1985. Known as the Prospect bypass, this alignment was opened to traffic on 23 January 1988.〔Annual Report 1987-1988, Tasmania, Department of Main Roads, 1988, p. 30〕
West of Burnie, the Smithton bypass was opened to traffic in May, 1988.〔Annual Report 1987-1988, Tasmania, Department of Main Roads, 1988, p. 37〕
The Deloraine Bypass was opened on 8 June 1990. The project was carried out over five years and cost a total of A$19 million. The bypass opening was performed by the Federal and State ministers for Land Transport and Roads and Transport respectively.〔Annual Report 1989-90, Tasmanian Government, Department of Roads and Transport, 1990, p. 5〕
Other bypasses have included Carrick and Hadspen in the late 1980s and the longest stretch of highway, the Hagley-Westbury bypass, which was completed in 2001. The 'old' highway alignment between Deloraine and Hadspen is now known as the Meander Valley Highway, and is promoted as a tourist route
The Bass Highway is, like Bass Strait, named for explorer George Bass.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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