Taranaki Daily News

Word on the street: Struthers Place

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Struthers Place runs off Rifle Range Rd in Waiwhakaih­o and was named after Robert Struthers.

In August 1997 tenders were called for the developmen­t of the Waiwhakaih­o industrial subdivisio­n.

As part of the project Rifle Range Rd, formed 10 years before this, was lengthened.

A new cul-de-sac was also constructe­d in conjunctio­n with the extra section of Rifle Range Rd to serve the subdivisio­n, now home to The Valley Mega Centre, and named Struthers Place. This little dead-end street lay on land that had once been occupied by the Taranaki County Council, and used as the site of their works depot.

It was suggested by the New Plymouth District Council Works and Services Department that the cul-desac be named Struthers Place in recognitio­n of the man who had managed this depot.

Robert Watson Struthers, known as Bob, had been Taranaki County Engineer for nearly 32 years when he retired in

1986.

Born in 1922, he moved to New Plymouth from Rotorua with his family in

1954 in order to take up the role. One of his many projects had been to oversee the sealing of every road in the county, giving Taranaki the highest percentage of sealed roads in New Zealand at the time.

Bob was also a keen flyer, having been part of the RNZAF Home Service during World War II.

He was a founding member of the Taranaki Gliding Club and in 1969 set the record for a glider flight from German Hill airfield near Egmont Village, covering 180 kilometres.

Bob Struthers and his wife Patricia had three children and eight grandchild­ren. He died in New Plymouth on January 30, 1993 and is buried in Onerahi Cemetery in Whangarei.

Contribute­d by the Taranaki Research Centre I Te Pua Wa¯nanga o Taranaki at Puke Ariki

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