I will give you our experience in the Gulf Country.
When we first came to Doomadgee, 1993, all roads in the district were dirt. This was until you got to Burke & Wills Roadhouse then it was single lane to Cloncurry.
In the late 90's they started laying bitumen, first from B&W to Gregory (mainly for the Century Mine) then they started extending it West until finally about 5 years ago it was all paved to Doomadgee & Burketown.
Before the bitumen it was a slow rough trip, depending on the last grading it could be a 7-9 hour trip to Cloncurry during the Dry & the road bashed your car to death over a period of time. In the wet the roads closed for months, washouts everywhere & most of the time just to hairy to make the trip worth trying. Even a decent storm could/would stop you for hours.
Now it is all sealed it is 5 hours to Cloncurry, the trip is far less stressful & any 2WD can do it fine. Yes, during the Wet we still get cut off but for weeks not months (someday they might build some bridges?) & although some folk still don't know how to drive out here it is a lot safer.
This is not to mention the upgrades to already sealed roads like Cloncurry to NT boarder, Cloncurry to Karumba.
Do I miss the dirt roads? Sort of, every trip was an adventure & sort of exciting. But, now is far easier, cheaper, we are not cut off as long & people do not need a 4WD which is less expensive for them.
Tourist will still buy their Land Cruisers & huge vans & they will still come & for the communities it has huge advantages in lots of ways.
The "Old Bush" has been declining for decades & will continue to do so, is this a bad thing? In some ways yes but in a lot of ways NO!
Living out here still has it challenges but is safer, more comfortable & the services are so much better than even 10 years ago. Visiting the Outback is one thing, living here is entirely different.
Jonesfam



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