The New Zealand Herald

Taming Auckland’s killer roads

‘Vision Zero’ internatio­nally successful in lowering alarming number of road deaths.

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Auckland’s ambitious plan to cut rampant deaths and serious injuries on its roads is based on an internatio­nal concept which has reduced road tolls in cities across the globe.

The concept, known as Vision Zero, originated in Sweden 20 years ago and is the theory behind Auckland’s new road safety thrust according to WSP Opus, the infrastruc­ture consultanc­y helping city authoritie­s to implement the plan.

Sweden has cut its road toll in half in the 20 years since it adopted Vision Zero - this despite a steady increase in traffic volumes - and Auckland is hoping it can cut the number of fatalities and road trauma by up to 60 per cent over the next 10 years by adopting the concept.

Phil Harrison, technical director of transport at WSP Opus, says he believes the Swedish experience shows the Auckland target is credible.

In 1997 when Sweden first adopted Vision Zero its road toll stood at 541. Last year, according to figures produced by the Swedish Road Administra­tion, the number had reduced to 254, more than half the 1997 total.

There have been similar successes in other cities: New York and San Francisco in the United States both adopted Vision Zero two years ago and last year both cities recorded the lowest number of road deaths since records were first kept more than 100 years ago, while in Mexico City the number of deaths was reduced by 18 per cent after one year.

Auckland’s plan comes as deaths on the region’s roads have reached alarming levels. In the last four years alone the number has increased three times as much as in the rest of the country.

Last year road-related incidents took the lives of 64 people in Auckland and caused serious injuries to more than 600. A 60 per cent reduction in fatalities would lower this number to 26; this means close to 200 lives could be saved over the next 10 years.

Vision Zero holds that no deaths or serious injuries are acceptable on roads. Widely taken up in cities throughout Europe and North America, the concept has also been adopted in New Zealand by Hamilton (and was endorsed by the government earlier this year) and is now on Auckland Council’s agenda.

“We seem to accept death and injury as part of travelling,” says Harrison. “How many deaths would we accept from our drinking water? If there were even one or two a year there would be an outcry and a public inquiry,” he says.

“If we had 200 killed in air crashes in a year we would hear all about it. But with the road toll we just say ‘oh well, that is just part of how it has always been’.”

Harrison says Vision Zero is about questionin­g this attitude: “We won’t stop crashes happening altogether but we believe we can reduce their impact, their seriousnes­s.”

Harrison says WSP Opus is working alongside road safety partners including AT, Auckland Council, New Zealand Transport Agency, Ministry of Transport, Police, ACC and district health boards.

He says a “whole suite” of interventi­ons are planned including lowering speed limits, installing more safety cameras, laying down high friction road surfacing, creating better and safer pedestrian infrastruc­ture, targeting high-risk intersecti­ons and fixing poor alignments on rural roads.

However he says WSP Opus has worked closely with authoritie­s in Stockholm, Sweden, to develop a road safety programme (it has both reduced fatalities and increased accessibil­ity for cyclists) and this expertise, along with insights from work carried out by WSP in New Jersey and Philadelph­ia, means Auckland is starting from a good base of knowledge.

Already speed reductions are in place in some areas of the city reflecting the mixes of activity taking place along these roads. Examples are Ponsonby Rd (limit reduced to 40kmh) and Queen St and Wynyard Quarter (30kmh).

Harrison says there may also be a case for reducing speed limits on some rural roads to as low as 60kmh.

 ?? Picture / NZ Herald ??
Picture / NZ Herald

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