Olympic Highway


The Olympic Highway is a rural road in the central western and south-eastern Riverina regions of New South Wales, Australia. The highway services rural communities and links the Hume Highway with the Mid-Western Highway and provides part of an alternate road link between Sydney and via and as well as servicing Wagga Wagga, linking with the Sturt Highway.
Initially a series of trunk routes, the road was named the Olympic Way on 5 July 1963, in honour of part of the path that the Olympic Torch took on its journey from Cowra to Albury for the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games. It was renamed as the Olympic Highway in 1996, and the route between Wagga Wagga and Cowra was used for torch relay for the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games. Despite its name, the road is not an official highway as classified by NSW Roads & Maritime Services, yet considered a rural road.
The Olympic Highway carries the A41 shield for its entire length, the majority of which is a single carriageway and also includes wider sections within urban areas and some passing lanes. Where the road passes through suburban areas it accommodates both parking and pedestrian needs of the town shopping centre and highway through traffic. A section of the highway through Wagga Wagga is a four-lane divided urban road where the highway is concurrent with the Sturt Highway.

Route

The highway runs generally north-south, roughly aligned to sections of the Sydney–Melbourne and the Blayney–Demondrille railway lines. The Olympic Highway approximately parallels the Hume Highway to the east and the Newell Highway to the west. The Olympic shares a short concurrency with the Sturt Highway in Wagga Wagga.
At its northern terminus in Cowra, the Olympic Highway adjoins the Mid-Western Highway that, from the northeast carries the A41 shield from Bathurst and, from the west carries the State Route B64 shield to ; and the Lachlan Valley Way that generally runs northwest-southwest between and and beyond. The Olympic Highway heads generally south by west through Koorawatha,,,, Wagga Wagga, and towards its southern terminus via a trumpet interchange with the Hume Highway located north of Albury at.
The only major river crossing is the Murrumbidgee River, crossed between and Wagga via the Gobbagombalin Bridge, at long believed to be the longest continuous-span viaduct in New South Wales, situated about northwest of the Wagga CBD and opened on 26 July 1997. Prior to the completion of the "Gobba" Bridge, the Olympic Highway followed a route that took it through the Wagga central business district via the Hampden Bridge, a wooden Allan Truss bridge that was opened in 1895 and eventually demolished in 2014.

Major intersections

Gallery