The Great Ocean Road starts near Geelong, Victoria and ends near Warrnambool, Victoria. It is approximately 245 km long.
The Great Ocean Road is 244 km long. The whole trip is 5 hours and 15 minutes non-stop, but you'll probably want to stop.
From the Melbourne CBD to the beginning of the Great Ocean Road at Anglesea is a distance of 112km. It takes around an hour and twenty minutes to travel.
From Melbourne's CBD to Anglesea, the start of the Great Ocean Road, is a distance of 112km and takes around an hour and twenty minutes to drive, depending on traffic.
Not at all. There are many roads and highways in Australia which are longer than the Great Ocean Road. However, few could rival the Great Ocean Road for its spectacular scenery and many twists and turns.
A link to a map of the Great Ocean Road can be found at the related link below.
Victoria
The Great Ocean Road passes along the southern coast of Australia, overlooking the Southern Ocean (sometimes also called the Great Southern Ocean), where you can see the natural landforms known as the Twelve Apostles.
The "official" eastern end of the Great Ocean Road starts at Anglesea, south of Geelong, and a distance of 108km from Melbourne's CBD. The distance then covered by the Great Ocean Road from Anglesea to its western end at Port Fairy is 264km.
The Great Ocean Road in Victoria, Australia was built by about 3000 returned servicemen, known as "Diggers", following World War I.
No. The formation known as the Twelve Apostles in Australia are in the sea. They can, however, be viewed from the western end of the Great Ocean Road.
The "official" eastern end of the Great Ocean Road starts at Anglesea, south of Geelong, and a distance of 108km from Melbourne's CBD. The distance then covered by the Great Ocean Road from Anglesea to its western end at Port Fairy is 264km
The Great Ocean Road is a famous scenic tourist road along the southern coast of Victoria.