Dudley Street, Yarralumla, ACT

PROPOSAL FOR ROAD - proposal for construction of a new 130 metre Access Road and a new roundabout intersection on Dudley Street, formalising the crossing of Uriarra Track, off road shared paths, a median, shared trench for service utilities, streetlights, signage, landscaping, and associated works.

External link Read more information

We found this application for you on the planning authority's website ago. The date it was received by them was not recorded.

(Source: ACT Planning & Land Authority, reference 201935514)

1 Comment

Create an account or sign in to have your say by adding your own comment.

  1. Michael Ellerman commented

    The crossing of the main Woden to City bike path at Dudley Street is unsafe for children or adults with bike trailers or cargo bikes. It is a busy intersection with traffic approaching from multiple directions. Between Woden and the City it is the most dangerous non-signalised intersection that must be crossed.

    Disappointingly it seems there are no plans to change this, despite the intersection being rebuilt as part of this proposal.

    The only viable solution to make it an intersection eg. school age children could cross safely, is to provide traffic lights for the bike path crossing. To facilitate that it may be necessary to move the crossing further west along Dudley Street, so that west bound traffic on Dudley Street has room to queue outside of the round about.

Have your say on this application

You're too late! The period for officially commenting on this application finished almost 5 years ago. If you chose to comment now, your comment will still be displayed here and be sent to the planning authority but it will not be officially considered by the planning authority.

Your comment and details will be sent to ACT Planning & Land Authority. Your name and comment will be posted publicly above.

Create an account or sign in to make a comment

This week

Find PlanningAlerts useful?

This independent project is part of the digital library from the local charity, the OpenAustralia Foundation. PlanningAlerts is powered by small donations from the people who use it to stay informed about changes to their local area. If you find it useful, chip in to support PlanningAlerts.

Back PlanningAlerts