Weekend Herald

$ 1.3m warning system aims to reduce traffic strikes at motorway bridge

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Truck drivers heading down Auckland’s Southern Motorway will now receive a trio of warnings if their vehicle is at risk of ploughing into one of the lowest and most frequently hit overbridge­s on the highway at Penrose.

The installati­on of the $ 1.3m system, including six new electric signs, was completed by the New Zealand Transport Agency [ NZTA] this week and switched on overnight on Thursday.

It comes almost four months after a crash on May 9, when a Higgins driver overestima­ted the Penrose bridge height and ploughed into it, causing the digger he was hauling to topple and block t wo of the three southbound lanes on the Southern Motorway.

It’s hoped the new system will help prevent a repeat of the incident which led to hours of traffic chaos.

It works by giving drivers repeated visual warnings if sensors on either side of the motorway deem a vehicle too tall.

In the first instance two warnings would be issued, prior to a last oppor- tunity to leave the motorway.

NZTA Auckland highway manager Brett Gliddon said those that don’t make the exit will be given a third and final warning to pull over or stop.

“It i s a very clear warning that evasive action is needed, it will be very difficult to miss or ignore.

“Bridge strikes cause delays that can affect many road users, creating disruption and financial losses to drivers and businesses.”

The agency was still seeking compensati­on from Higgins over damage to the bridge from the May accident, the details of which were confidenti­al.

NZTA’s structural inspection report released to the Herald under the Official Informatio­n Act showed the strike’s impact caused concrete to come loose from the structure with other visible vertical cracks and distorted steel armour plates.

Truck driver Graham John Kennett, 65, has been charged with dangerous driving over the crash. He pleaded not guilty at the Auckland District Court in June and is due to reappear in court on September 14.

The charge carries a maximum driving disqualifi­cation of six months and is also punishable by up to three months’ imprisonme­nt and a fine of up to $ 4500.

Since 2008 there have been 39 incidents on the Penrose overbridge, 37 per cent of the total 106 strikes across all of the bridges on Auckland’s highways.

This year alone the Penrose bridge has been hit four times — with nine strikes at other bridges on the city’s motorways.

According to the NZTA the bridge, which has a clearance height of 4.57m, was built in 1952 and had its underside reinforced with steel due to the frequent bridge strikes.

The maximum height for trucks travelling on this part of the motorway is 4.25m.

An agency spokeswoma­n estimated the total cost of bridge- strike damage across the city network was around $ 203,000 over seven years.

Only one at the Penrose overbridge, on January 29, 2015, was deemed severe enough for the agency to recoup costs of $ 31,120 from the company responsibl­e, Tracta Tranz.

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