Gympie–Brooloo–Kenilworth Road is a continuous 51.6 kilometres (32.1 mi) road route in the Gympie and Sunshine Coast regions of Queensland, Australia. It has two official names, Gympie–Brooloo Road and Kenilworth–Brooloo Road. The entire route is signed as State Route 51.
Gympie–Brooloo Road (number 483) is a state-controlled district road and Kenilworth–Brooloo Road (number 481) is also a state-controlled district road.[2][3]
Gympie–Brooloo Road is known locally (with Local and State Government approval) as Mary Valley Road.
Route description
The road commences as Gympie–Brooloo Road (Mary Valley Road) at an intersection with the Bruce Highway (A1) in Gympie. It crosses the Mary River and runs generally south, following the Mary River Valley. After running through the eastern corner of the residential locality of Southside the road passes through or by rich farming land in a number of localities. These include Jones Hill, Long Flat, Gilldora and Dagun. It next turns south-east then south through Amamoor. The village of Amamoor is well to the west of the road, on the former railway line. In Amamoor the Mary Valley Link Road branches off to the east. The road continues south through Kandanga and Imbil to Brooloo, the terminus of the former railway line. In Imbil the Tuchekoi Road branches off to the east, and Yabba Creek Road runs to the west.
At Brooloo the road changes to Kenilworth–Brooloo Road, running south and south-east to Kenilworth, where it ends at an intersection with the Eumundi–Kenilworth Road, which branches off to the east. Eumundi–Kenilworth Road continues south as Elizabeth Street, with no route number other than Tourist Drive 22, to an intersection with Charles Street. From there the road (and Tourist Drive 22) continues south as Maleny–Kenilworth Road.
Tourist Drive 42
Tourist Drive 42 is concurrent with most of Gympie–Brooloo Road, leaving it at Kandanga to follow Kandanga–Imbil Road to Imbil on its way to Borumba Dam. On returning from the dam it rejoins at Imbil and runs north a short distance before turning south-east to Tuchekoi.
Pastoral leases were taken up in the Fraser Coast Region from 1843, and European settlement of what is now Gympie began soon after. The Gympie district was part of the large Widgee Widgee pastoral area.[4] In 1887, 43,000 acres (17,000 ha) of land were resumed from the Widgee Widgee pastoral run for the establishment of small farms. Further south, 21,760 acres (8,810 ha) were resumed from Imbil. The land was offered for selection on 17 April 1887.[5] The opening of new farms on the western side of the Mary River to the south of Gympie led to the development of roads in the Mary Valley.
A pastoral lease was taken up as Kenilworth Station in 1850.[6] The effects of the 1884 Land Act reached the Kenilworth area in 1888, when land on grazing properties was surveyed and made available for selection.[7] Development of small farms in the Imbil and Kenilworth areas led to the need for a road to transport products to Gympie, and also requests for a railway line. The road was completed quickly, but a railway did not arrive until 1914-15. Meanwhile, further road improvements had been undertaken.
Upgrades
A project to design active transport crossings, at a cost of $1.3 million, was to be completed in July 2022.[8]
Intersecting state-controlled roads
This road intersects with the following state-controlled roads:
Mary Valley Link Road
Tuchekoi Road
Yabba Creek Road
Mary Valley Link Road
Mary Valley Link Road
Location
Bruce Highway, Traveston to Gympie–Brooloo Road, Amamoor
Length
2.7 km (1.7 mi)
Mary Valley Link Road (number 480) is a state-controlled district road rated as a local road of regional significance (LRRS).[2][3] It runs from the Bruce Highway in Traveston to Gympie–Brooloo Road in Amamoor, a distance of 2.7 kilometres (1.7 mi). This road has no major intersections.[9]
Tuchekoi Road
Tuchekoi Road
Location
Gympie–Brooloo Road, Imbil to Kenilworth–Skyring Creek Road, Tuchekoi
Length
4.5 km (2.8 mi)
Tuchekoi Road (number 482) is a state-controlled district road rated as a local road of regional significance (LRRS).[2][3] It runs from Gympie–Brooloo Road in Imbil to Kenilworth–Skyring Creek Road in Tuchekoi, a distance of 4.5 kilometres (2.8 mi). It is part of Tourist Drive 42. This road has no major intersections.[10]
Yabba Creek Road
Yabba Creek Road
Location
Gympie–Brooloo Road, Imbil to Borumba Dam, Lake Borumba
Length
13.5 km (8.4 mi)
Yabba Creek Road (number 4832) is a state-controlled district road rated as a local road of regional significance (LRRS).[2][3] It runs from Gympie–Brooloo Road in Imbil to the Borumba Dam in Lake Borumba, a distance of 13.5 kilometres (8.4 mi). It is part of Tourist Drive 42. This road has no major intersections.[11]