State Highway 6 (New Zealand)

State Highway 6 shield}}
State Highway 6
Route information
Maintained by NZ Transport Agency
Length1,162 km (722 mi)
Tourist
routes
Southern Scenic Route between Invercargill-Lorneville and Five Rivers-Queenstown (as of 2010)
Major junctions
North end SH 1 (Grove Road/Sinclair Street) at Blenheim
Major intersections SH 7 (Omoto Road) at Greymouth
SH 8A (Shortcut Road) to SH 8 at Luggate
SH 8B to SH 8 at Cromwell
South end SH 1 (Tay Street/Clyde Street) at Invercargill
Location
CountryNew Zealand
Primary
destinations
Nelson, Murchison, Inangahua Junction, Runanga, Greymouth, Hokitika, Haast, Wānaka, Cromwell, Queenstown, Lumsden, Winton
Highway system
SH 5 SH 7

State Highway 6 (SH 6) is a major New Zealand state highway. It extends from the Marlborough region in the northeastern corner of the South Island across the top of the island, then down the length of the island, initially along the West Coast and then across the Southern Alps through inland Otago and finally across the Southland Plains to the island's south coast. Distances are measured from north to south.

The highway is the longest single highway in the country, though it is shorter than the combined totals of the two highways that comprise SH 1, SHs 1N and 1S.

For most of its length SH6 is a two-lane single carriageway, except for 5.4 km of dual carriageway in Invercargill, and passing lanes in Invercargill and Nelson, with at-grade intersections and property accesses, both in rural and urban areas. Roundabouts are common in major towns, with traffic signals only found in Invercargill, Queenstown, Richmond, and Tāhunanui with signals also controlling Iron Bridge in the upper Buller Gorge, Fern Arch in the lower Buller Gorge near Westport, and the Albert Town Bridge over the Clutha River near Albert Town. NZTA classified the highway as an arterial route, except for two sections between Blenheim (SH 1) and Richmond (SH 60) and between Cromwell (SH 8B) and Five Rivers (SH 97) where SH 6 is classified as a regional strategic route.[1]

  1. ^ "One Network Road Classification: South Island State Highways" (PDF). New Zealand Transport Agency. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 February 2016. Retrieved 6 March 2016.

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