Regency Road

Regency Road (and its eastern section as Muller Road) is a main east-west road forming a continuous connection between the inner northern suburbs of Adelaide, South Australia. Located approximately 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) north of the city centre, Regency Road carries a large amount of freight traffic, being located near Regency Park and the Churchill Road industrial area.

Regency Road

Muller Road

Regency Road is located in Greater Adelaide
West end
West end
East end
East end
Coordinates
General information
TypeRoad
LocationAdelaide
Length7.9 km (4.9 mi)[1]
Major junctions
West endDavid Terrace
Kilkenny, Adelaide
 
East endThistle Avenue
Hapmstead Gardens, Adelaide
Location(s)
RegionWestern Adelaide, Eastern Adelaide, Northern Adelaide[2]
Major suburbsRegency Park, Prospect, Broadview

Route

Regency Road commences at the intersection of Torrens Road and David Terrance outside Arndale Shopping Centre, Kilkenny and heads east through Prospect to meet Hampstead Road in Broadview, where it continues eastwards as Muller Road to end at North East Road in Hampstead Gardens.

History

Regency Road was previously named Islington Road between Torrens Road and Churchill Road, Irish Harp Road between Churchill and Main North Roads, and Rakes Road from there to Hampstead Road.[3] In 1970, four years after the Islington Sewage Farm had closed and the land fallen into disuse, the new suburb of Regency Park was created on the site and named in honour of Queen Elizabeth II (the regent) who visited Adelaide that year.[4] At the same time, Islington Road, which formed the southern boundary of the suburb was re-gazetted (along with Irish Harp and Rakes Roads) as Regency Road.

In 2007 the intersection of Regency Road and Hampstead Road was upgraded to align Regency and Muller roads, creating a continuous east–west route from North East Road in the east to Torrens Road in the west.[5]

The intersection of Regency Road and South Road was upgraded as part of the North–South Motorway. Construction started in 2019 and was completed in March 2021. The motorway now passes over Regency Road, with access in each direction via the South Road slip-roads.[6]

Major intersections

LGA[7]Location[1][8]km[1]miDestinationsNotes
Charles SturtKilkenny0.00.0David Terrace (south)  Woodville ParkWestern terminus of Regency Road
Torrens Road (northwest, southeast)  Rosewater, Ovingham
Port Adelaide EnfieldFerryden Park-Croydon Park-Regency Park tripoint1.40.87Days Road  Angle Park, Croydon Park
Regency Park-Croydon Park boundary1.91.2South Road  Wingfield, HindmarshAccess to North–South Motorway via South Road
Regency Park-Dudley Park boundary2.31.4Naweena Road  Regency Park
Port Adelaide Enfield-Prospect boundaryRegency Park-Dudley Park-Prospect tripoint2.81.7Gawler and Adelaide–Port Augusta SG railway lines
ProspectProspect3.11.9 Churchill Road  Cavan, Ovingham
3.92.4Prospect Road  Gepps Cross, Prospect
Prospect-Port Adelaide Enfield boundaryProspect-Enfield-Sefton Park tripoint4.72.9 Main North Road  Gawler, Waterloo Corner, Gepps Cross, North Adelaide
Port Adelaide EnfieldBroadview-Manningham boundary6.33.9 Hampstead Road  Northfield, Payneham, Glen OsmondName change: Regency Road (west), Muller Road (east)
Greenacres-Hampstead Gardens-Klemzig tripoint7.94.9 North East Road  Walkerville, Modbury, Birdwood
Thistle Avenue  KlemzigEastern terminus of Muller Road
  •       Route transition

Notes

  1. Google (7 July 2022). "Regency Road" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  2. "Location SA Map viewer with regional layers". Government of South Australia. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  3. Fuller, W.C. (1940). "Adelaide - Map 8" (Map). Street Directory of Adelaide and Suburbs with Reference Maps. Keyplan. Retrieved 16 December 2015.
  4. "Suburbs and subdivisions within the City of Port Adelaide Enfield" (PDF). City of Port Adelaide Enfield. p. 26. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
  5. Hampstead Road, Regency Road, Muller Road intersection upgrade : final report, Government of South Australia, 2007 via National Library of Australia
  6. "Regency Road to Pym Street". Department of Infrastructure and Transport, Government of South Australia. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
  7. "Location SA Map viewer with LGA layers". Government of South Australia. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  8. "Location SA Map viewer with suburb layers". Government of South Australia. Retrieved 16 June 2022.


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