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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Lions_Road
rdf:type
yago:WikicatHighwaysInAustralia dbo:Road yago:Whole100003553 yago:Way104564698 dbo:Settlement yago:PhysicalEntity100001930 yago:Artifact100021939 geo:SpatialThing yago:Road104096066 yago:YagoGeoEntity yago:YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity wikidata:Q34442 owl:Thing dbo:ArchitecturalStructure dbo:Infrastructure yago:Object100002684 dbo:RouteOfTransportation yago:Highway103519981
rdfs:label
Lions Road
rdfs:comment
The Lions Road is a section of the road running between the Summerland Way in New South Wales and the Mount Lindesay Highway near Rathdowney, Queensland at Running Creek. It joins two pre-existing sections of rural road, namely Gradys Creek Road in New South Wales and Running Creek Road in Queensland. It was so named as most of the funding, planning and voluntary labour for the road came from the Kyogle branch of the Lions Club. Kyogle resident Jack Hurley was one of the most prominent advocates of the road. Despite the NSW Government rejecting the idea in 1969, it was opened the following year.
foaf:name
Lions Road
geo:lat
-28.33180046081543
geo:long
152.972900390625
dcterms:subject
dbc:Scenic_Rim_Region dbc:Lions_Clubs_International dbc:Highways_in_Australia dbc:Kyogle_Council
dbo:wikiPageID
939434
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1060894720
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Border_Ranges_National_Park dbc:Kyogle_Council dbr:McPherson_Range dbr:Mount_Chinghee_National_Park dbr:Cougal_Spiral dbr:Bitumen dbr:New_South_Wales dbr:Lions_Club dbr:Running_Creek,_Queensland dbr:Kyogle,_New_South_Wales dbr:Rathdowney,_Queensland dbc:Scenic_Rim_Region dbr:Sydney-Brisbane_rail_corridor dbc:Highways_in_Australia dbc:Lions_Clubs_International dbr:Road_transport_in_Australia dbr:Mount_Lindesay_Highway dbr:Loadstone,_New_South_Wales dbr:Summerland_Way
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
n7:history-of-lions-road.html
owl:sameAs
freebase:m.03rvh1 yago-res:Lions_Road n21:4qbSX wikidata:Q6555910
dbp:through
Cougal, New South Wales
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbt:Reflist dbt:Coord dbt:Infobox_Australian_road dbt:Use_Australian_English dbt:Portal dbt:Use_dmy_dates dbt:Australia-road-stub
dbp:directionA
North
dbp:directionB
South
dbp:state
qld
dbp:type
rural road
georss:point
-28.3318 152.9729
dbo:abstract
The Lions Road is a section of the road running between the Summerland Way in New South Wales and the Mount Lindesay Highway near Rathdowney, Queensland at Running Creek. It joins two pre-existing sections of rural road, namely Gradys Creek Road in New South Wales and Running Creek Road in Queensland. It was so named as most of the funding, planning and voluntary labour for the road came from the Kyogle branch of the Lions Club. Kyogle resident Jack Hurley was one of the most prominent advocates of the road. Despite the NSW Government rejecting the idea in 1969, it was opened the following year. It connects these two roads over the Richmond Gap in the McPherson Range. For a good deal of its length it is a narrow one-laned road that cannot be used by trucks or cars towing caravans or trailers. In the 1990s the road was fully sealed with bitumen but the original alignments were largely unaltered, leading to possible surprises for inexperienced drivers who allow themselves to build up excessive speed, particularly on steep mountainous stretches. On the NSW side there are many bridges over small creeks, with steep approaches. They were of wooden construction that could only support low vehicular weights, but almost all of them were replaced by concrete bridges in 2017–18. All the bridges on the Queensland side are concrete, but several of them are one-lane bridges on which vehicles travelling 'upstream' must give way before entering the bridge. In 2017, Kyogle Council started a major upgrade program where all but two of the narrow timber bridges were replaced by modern concrete bridges. The remaining timber bridges do not have the weight limitations required, and will be replaced at the end of their natural life.The road was fully reopened in May 2018 following extended delays and closures. The road runs through the Border Ranges National Park and it is altogether a scenic drive. The road also parallels the main Brisbane-Sydney railway line, including near a feature of the railway line known as the Cougal Spiral (or Border Loop). It passes adjacent to a small section of the Mount Chinghee National Park.
dbp:endA
Running Creek Road, Running Creek, Queensland
dbp:endB
Gradys Creek Road, Loadstone, New South Wales
dbp:roadName
Lions Road
gold:hypernym
dbr:Section
prov:wasDerivedFrom
wikipedia-en:Lions_Road?oldid=1060894720&ns=0
dbo:wikiPageLength
3549
dbo:city
dbr:New_South_Wales
dbo:country
dbr:Australia
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
wikipedia-en:Lions_Road
geo:geometry
POINT(152.97290039062 -28.331800460815)