The New Zealand Herald

Penlink takes a small step closer

- Bernard Orsman

Astart on fixing one of Auckland’s worst roading bottleneck­s is tantalisin­gly close for the residents of Whangapara¯oa Peninsula. Decades after it was first mooted, the two-lane Penlink road connecting the burgeoning population on the peninsula to the Northern Motorway is another step closer to constructi­on.

The appointmen­t last week of a technical adviser to finalise the design of the consented 7km two-lane road with a separated walking and cycling shared path has been warmly greeted by locals.

“It’s a battle we have won and I can’t wait for the final result,” says Leanne Willis, who lives in Little Manly and is a member of the Hibiscus and Bays Local Board.

She said if she does not leave home by 7am she will not be at work in Takapuna until 8.15am, with much of that time spent stuck in traffic getting off the peninsula.

“The traffic is terrible. Penlink is going to improve things ten-fold,” Willis said.

Penlink has gone from a regional project overseen by Auckland Transport to part of a $3.5 billion Aucklandwi­de package of transport projects announced by the Government in January.

Other projects include the $1.4 billion Mill Rd highway between Manukau and Drury, widening the Southern Motorway between Papakura and Drury, SkyPath over Auckland Harbour Bridge and about $1b of new rail projects, including electrifyi­ng rail from Papakura to Pukekohe.

Constructi­on on Penlink (peninsula link road) is due to start in late 2021 and open in 2025.

Penlink will create an alternativ­e route for more than 30,000 residents on the peninsula and ease congestion at the Silverdale interchang­e, Hibiscus Coast Highway and Whangapara¯oa Rd.

The appointmen­t of GHD as the principal technical adviser will help the project gain new momentum towards the start of constructi­on, said NZ Transport Agency senior delivery manager Andy Thackwray.

This follows the appointmen­t of Boffa Miskell in July to monitor and manage sensitive marine and freshwater issues in the area of the road before and during constructi­on.

Kerry Inskeep, who moved to Army Bay at the end of the peninsula in the 1970s, when it was still a gravel road, said a new road was mooted back then but nothing had happened.

Now Whangapara¯oa Rd, the only road in and out of the peninsula, was choking at peak times and what was a 20-minute drive to get off the peninsula could easily be more than 30 minutes, he said.

Inskeep said dynamic lanes — changing the direction of centre lanes at peak times — had been a big improvemen­t on Whangapara¯oa Rd between the Hibiscus Coast turnoff and Red Beach, but wanted Penlink to be four lanes, otherwise it would be false economy.

Stanmore Bay resident Chris Tarpey also wants to see a four-lane road considered.

He said Penlink had been promised for decades: “I think, like many of us living on Whangapara¯oa Peninsula, we will believe it when we see it.”

Manly resident Matt Mitchell said Penlink will would make a massive difference, but believed it is only one piece of the puzzle to improve transport options.

“The other thing that needs to go hand-in-hand with the bridge is a seven-day ferry service,” he said.

Local councillor John Watson was heartened to see NZTA cranking up work in a business-like way.

He said Penlink started as a solution for the peninsula, but it has changed to enable growth at Silverdale, Milldale and Millwater, and later at Dairy Flat.

Penlink will be a tolled road, but a fee has not been set. Watson said $2 to $3 would be a reasonable toll.

 ?? Source: NZTA. Photo / Supplied. Herald graphic ?? PLANNED PENINSULA ROUTE
Penlink developmen­t which will provide another route in and out of the Whangaparā­oa Peninsula.
Source: NZTA. Photo / Supplied. Herald graphic PLANNED PENINSULA ROUTE Penlink developmen­t which will provide another route in and out of the Whangaparā­oa Peninsula.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand