Both the old name, and the new route names, will be displayed on signage. Motorways will retain the first letter M, while A will be used to designate routes of national significance and B will be used routes of state significance. "From now on, you'll just travel on the M1." "If you were travel across Sydney from the Sydney Airport to the north, you would travel down General Homes Drive, Southern Cross Drive, Dowling Street, Eastern Distributor Motorway, Cahill Expressway, Sydney Harbour Tunnel, Bradfield Highway, Warringah Expressway, and on and on," he said. Mr Gay said the changes would make driving simpler, particularly for those travelling routes that covered a range of different road names. The new names can apply to either a single road, or a series of roads that form a corridor. Roads such as the Princes Highway or Bells Line of Road will keep their current names but will also receive a second alpha-numeric title, such as the A1 or B56, from March 2013. Roads Minister Duncan Gay this afternoon announced a $20 million project to change road signs across the state in an attempt to make navigating long distances simpler, particularly for tourists. Motorists heading north west on the Bells Line of Road will soon be driving along the B59 under a new project to standardise and rename major driving routes across New South Wales using numbers and letters.
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