The Gold Coast Bulletin

TURNING OVER A NEW REEF

- NICHOLAS MCELROY nicholas.mcelroy@news.com.au NEW Andrew McKinnon column, P42

THE artificial reef at Narrowneck is already producing bigger waves for surfers, despite the $2 million restoratio­n project yet to be finished.

THE artificial reef at Narrowneck is already producing bigger waves for surfers, despite the $2 million restoratio­n project yet to be finished.

The Gold Coast City Council has also banned boaties from the area after they tore the original reef to shreds with anchors.

Work dumping more than 70 huge sandbags on the sea floor is expected to finish this month, but North End Boardrider­s president Darren Clark said waves had already been spotted breaking off the reef in larger swells.

“We’ve had reports it’s already starting to break out there and there’s still a layer of bags to go on top,” said Mr Clark, who had two meetings with the Gold Coast City Council before the project began.

The sandbags have been placed on to the existing reef offshore, which has sunk into the sea floor after it was built in 1999 to prevent beach erosion.

The reef has been controvers­ial – once labelled as a “hoax of a wave” – because an improved surf break had been spruiked as a secondary benefit.

“I don’t think it ever delivered what people thought it would do,” Mr Clark said.

He said the reef occasional­ly produced quality waves before it sank into the seabed.

“It broke up the straight swells which came through rather than (waves coming through as) 10-foot-tall closeouts,” Mr Clark said.

“Now they’re topping it back up, because the original bags are below it, so there’s a firmer foundation and they’re not going to sink too far under the sand.

“We’re getting pretty excited about the bigger days that come through because it will give us an option to surf the reef.”

A council spokeswoma­n said once work was complete the reef would be 1.5m underwater at low tide, meaning swells would break on the reef rather than missing the sand bags and breaking closer to shore.

The spokeswoma­n said council had tested designs for the reef in the Queensland Government hydraulics laboratory to improve coastal protection and wave quality.

“The renewal design was selected based on the results of the physical modelling, with decisions on individual geotextile container locations based on the modelling analysis,” the spokeswoma­n said.

Council has prohibited boaties from dropping anchor in the area.

“Preventing vessels from anchoring on the reef will help mitigate potential safety hazards and ensure that the renewed reef is not damaged by anchors,” she said.

SURF SCENE

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 ??  ?? Seventy huge sandbags are being dumped on to the sea floor to upgrade the artificial reef at Narrowneck which has sunk since being built in 1999.
Seventy huge sandbags are being dumped on to the sea floor to upgrade the artificial reef at Narrowneck which has sunk since being built in 1999.
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