Te Awamutu Courier

Dam road to close as part of $75m hydro refurbishm­ent

The route will be shut for four months

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The road across Mercury’s Kara¯piro Dam will be closed for about four months from August this year as part of the $75 million, six-year upgrade to the station.

Mercury is getting the word out early because it understand­s that pedestrian­s, cyclists and drivers are accustomed to using the dam road to cross the river and this closure may mean a change or a slightly longer drive.

“While we’ve closed our road for short-term maintenanc­e before, to the best of our knowledge we’ve never had to close it for so long, so we wanted to give the community as much notice as possible,” says Mercury head of operations Matt Kedian.

The road across the dam will be closed from August to December, and then weekends-only opening for a time from January.

Planning continues, and exact dates will be confirmed.

“The Kara¯piro Dam has been part of the landscape for 75 years and we know it’s well used to cross the Waikato River,” says Matt.

Local iwi, the Kara¯piro Lake Users

Group, and other community groups and stakeholde­rs have all been made aware of the plan.

The road closure from August is to enable one part of the planned major works on the station, replacemen­t of the turbine headgates by Andritz Hydro.

“These act as a valve and close off the water to allow maintenanc­e of the station generation equipment.

“The wider programme of work on the dam and power station started last year, and will be under way until 2025,” says Matt.

“Closing the road is necessary to keep everyone safe, and we thank road users for their patience during this time.”

Constructi­on of the Kara¯piro power station commenced in 1940, during World War II, and progress was affected by war-related labour and materials shortages. It was completed in 1947 and commission­ed in 1948.

The Kara¯piro station comprises three identical Kaplan turbine generating units with a combined output of 96MW.

The programme of works will increase overall peak station capacity by 17 per cent, or 16.5MW, to 112.5MW (enough to power about 19,000 homes) and average energy production by 32GW to 537GW a year.

As well as the headgate works, major areas for attention include the turbine, generators and governor systems.

As a part of concurrent work to future-proof the station, other items are also being addressed due to either age-related issues (bypass valves and associated works) or legacy performanc­e challenges (hydro intake gates and operating mechanisms, stoplogs).

Kara¯ piro Power Station output is being increased 17 per cent.

 ?? Photo / Alistair Gutherie ?? The road across Kara¯ piro Dam will be closed for about four months later this year for extensive upgrades to the power station.
Photo / Alistair Gutherie The road across Kara¯ piro Dam will be closed for about four months later this year for extensive upgrades to the power station.
 ?? Photo / Supplied ??
Photo / Supplied

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