Otago Daily Times

AA says road change could snarl traffic

- HAMISH MACLEAN hamish.maclean@odt.co.nz

IF planners get proposed road changes wrong, they could bring Dunedin city centre traffic to a standstill, the New Zealand Automobile Associatio­n says.

The AA is critical of a proposal that did not give any informatio­n on how the options might affect traffic flows, but which the associatio­n says could halve the capacity of major roads and lower speed limits in the city centre.

The NZ Transport Agency, Dunedin City Council and Otago Regional Council are looking at changing the oneway northsouth pair through the central city, and other roading changes, as they work out how to keep people moving around the central city, where a new hospital is due to be built over the next decade.

AA Otago District Council chairman Malcolm Budd said without evidenceba­sed decisionma­king, the proposed changes not only could make traffic in Dunedin ‘‘substantia­lly worse’’, but Dunedin could be headed down another failed transport project like the 2015 South Dunedin cycleways.

‘‘And then they’re going to have to turn around and say ‘Oh, we’re going to have to rethink all of this.’ They’re going to have to rip it all up and start again.’’

The AA has made a fourpage submission as part of a public online survey being done by the project group.

The mistakes in the South Dunedin cycleway network cost the city council hundreds of thousands of dollars to remove after a public outcry when they were installed five years ago, Mr Budd said.

The multiagenc­y group behind the current $450,000 ‘‘programme business case’’ under way is soliciting feedback on proposals to either keep the two oneway state highways through the central city, and introduce a slowspeed zone on both, or turn the southbound Castle St oneway state highway into a 50kmh twoway highway and the Cumberland St oneway state highway into a twoway 30kmh local road with cycle lanes.

Transport agency regional relationsh­ips director Jim Harland said at the start of the consultati­on ‘‘even the cheapest’’ options under considerat­ion would cost more than $100 million.

The AA criticises the ‘‘poor process’’ that had not presented any evidence of analysis of the potential impact on traffic for public considerat­ion.

‘‘Transport modelling demonstrat­ing the impacts the changes would have on the transport system should have been completed before options were put to the public for feedback, with the results made publicly available,’’ the submission reads.

‘‘The public is being asked to give feedback on options based on streetscap­e images, without any informatio­n on how the transport system would perform.’’

It also opposes changing Dunedin’s citycentre to a twoway system, and calls for evidence to be used in decisions on any future speedlimit, or parking, changes.

However, it supports the proposed upgrade of Wharf and Thomas Burns Sts, a ‘‘harbour arterial’’ route so the road could handle more heavy vehicles.

Mr Budd said a growing city would produce more traffic travelling through it, and ‘‘the arterial route is the only option to get the traffic out of that oneway street system’’.

‘‘We’re not looking five, 10 years, we’re looking 20, 30 years down the track,’’ Mr Budd said.

Last week, the project’s joint client lead, and city council transport strategy manager Nick Sargent said only about a third of the 290 responses so far were in favour of doing away with the oneway system and moving to a twoway system.

The informatio­n the group had on how the changes to Dunedin streets might affect travel times through the city, or which intersecti­ons might get traffic buildup due to the proposed changes, would only be made public ‘‘at the postengage­ment stage’’.

The consultati­on closes tomorrow.

❛ Transport modelling

demonstrat­ing the impacts the changes

would have on the transport system should have been completed before options were put to the public for feedback

AA submission

 ?? PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH ?? Traffic concerns . . . AA Otago District Council chairman Malcolm Budd says his organisati­on is opposing proposed changes to Dunedin’s oneway state highway system.
PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH Traffic concerns . . . AA Otago District Council chairman Malcolm Budd says his organisati­on is opposing proposed changes to Dunedin’s oneway state highway system.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand