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Residents livid that their street has been turned into a drag strip

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On Monday night this week, Auckland Central MP Nikki Kaye called a public meeting at the Freemans Bay Community Centre, just down the hill from Ponsonby. The reason: residents of nearby Collingwoo­d St are angry their street has been turned into a drag strip and they blame Auckland Transport.

“Our street,” said David Drees, the confessed “main agitator” who got Kaye to call the meeting, “has become dangerous, noisy, there are maniacs flying up and down that street during the day and all night long. It’s got so you can’t go out on the street. You can’t wash your car . . .”

Goodness. But even allowing for perhaps a hint of hyperbole, Collingwoo­d St, which runs from the Zambesi corner of Ponsonby Rd down through Freemans Bay, clearly has a problem.

The reason is, since Auckland Transport (AT) put a roundabout on Franklin Rd, one block along, drivers have preferred to use Collingwoo­d St as their through-route to and from Ponsonby.

Actually, the reason is, Google tells motorists to use Collingwoo­d St so all the Uber drivers go that way.

Or, the reason is, Ponsonby drivers, impatient at having to wait for the traffic lights at the top of Franklin Rd, are ratrunning through their own neighbours’ side streets.

Or, the reason is, AT put up a sign on Ponsonby Rd advising drivers to use the street.

All those things are true. The meeting was fantastic. AT was represente­d by two staffers, both of whom responded with concern, explanatio­ns and assurances the problems would be addressed.

“We’re not going to wait,” said Ben Halliwell, AT’s “elected member relationsh­ip manager”.

He said they were assessing the scale of the problem and would move “relatively quickly”.

Although, “We want to get it right and not make things worse.”

The meeting accepted that. Jared Plumridge was also there. He’s AT’s engineerin­g team leader for the central city and the south. Plumridge said they could fix some things straight away, and mentioned a dangerous manhole bump in the road and the sign misdirecti­ng traffic into the street. It had been put up on the wrong street and he apologised.

True to their word, that sign is gone and the manhole bump is being assessed.

But there’s much more to do. Graeme Edwards, another of the leading agitators, called the problem “an unintended consequenc­e of the Franklin Rd project”. Because of that, he said, fixing it should be done now and paid for out of the Franklin Rd budget. The officials made it fairly clear that was unlikely.

Edwards has videoed the traffic in peak times at the start and end of the day. I’ve seen the videos. They suggest about 400 vehicles an hour use the street at peak time. Almost all of them go straight through.

In the morning rush, the attraction for them is twofold. First, as mentioned, cars heading north can avoid the Franklin Rd lights if they duck down Collingwoo­d St. Second, when they do that, they come out at Wellington St, turn left, enter the new roundabout on Franklin Rd — and have right of way ahead of the cars coming down Franklin Rd.

Unbelievab­le. Commuters desperate to shave a minute or two off their travel time can’t bear waiting in line, oblivious to the unpleasant­ness it creates for others.

It’s not hard to identify the goal for Collingwoo­d St: to make the street too hard for cars to use as a rat run.

That definitely means a speed limit of 30km/h and a more difficult entrance at the bottom of the street. Other options include:

● The top entrance is narrow and has a raised table crossing for pedestrian­s: make it even harder to get into.

● Speed bumps.

● A narrower carriagewa­y.

● A partial roadblock, such as using planters to make the road one lane wide halfway down, so cars have to give way to each other.

● Use the planters to obstruct the sightlines, so the street doesn’t look like a drag strip.

● Block the road completely in the middle.

● Put angle-parking down one side, with two narrow vehicle lanes and a plaza-wide shared path down the other.

They don’t have to do all that, and some of those ideas are expensive.

The residents will need to come to a consensus on what they want.

Late in the meeting, resident Eve de Castro got up, introduced herself as a socialist, and asked if anyone would mind if she and some friends just put out some road cones and planters. “Guerrilla tactics”, just for now.

Nikki Kaye jumped up. “It’s not acceptable for residents to take things into their own hands,” she said.

But why? They’d get the job done. You go, Eve, I reckon.

The astonishin­g thing is, making streets safer is Auckland Transport policy, under its Safe Speeds and Safer Communitie­s programmes.

Safe Speeds, which will lower limits on 10 per cent of city roads, was adopted last October. But AT still hasn’t started to implement it and Collingwoo­d St isn’t included. “There will be another tranche of streets,” said Jared Plumridge. Good to know.

This isn’t a case of Nimbys up in arms about some council plan in their neighbourh­ood. The locals support the plans, vigorously. But they still aren’t happening.

Nikki Kaye said it was “unacceptab­le that Auckland Transport can’t move quickly on safety.” She’s so right.

There are two more big problems for the people of Collingwoo­d St. One is, AT has to decide where their street comes in the queue. Just this week it announced Safer Communitie­s would be introduced in Mangere Bridge. Wider footpaths, especially near schools and the shopping village, raised speed tables and more, said AT’s safety manager, Bryan Sherritt, so “children can walk around the village and get to and from school safely”.

That’s exactly what Collingwoo­d St wants, but does it have a prior claim on danger spots in South Auckland? Does it have a prior claim on Ponsonby Rd itself, which desperatel­y needs the cycle lanes that are nowhere in sight although they have already been approved?

The fact is, Collingwoo­d St’s need is acute: it has a crazy number of cars whipping through. But the other fact is, AT has an operationa­l budget that isn’t close to what it needs to make our streets safer.

The second problem for Collingwoo­d St is even bigger. In Graeme Edwards’ video, a staggering 40 per cent of the cars heading north on that part of Ponsonby Rd make the right turn down Collingwoo­d St.

A “No Right Turn” rule would solve the problem for the street entirely. But if all those cars had to queue at the Franklin Rd lights instead, there would be a huge tailback, seriously underminin­g safety on Ponsonby Rd and possibly causing chaos as far back as Richmond Rd.

The fact is, there are too many cars in Ponsonby and that can’t be fixed by building more roads or rejigging the existing ones.

So . . . what? The video reveals almost all the cars on Collingwoo­d St have only one person in them. Most, presumably, come from Grey Lynn and the rest of Ponsonby. Most are heading for the city centre, two kilometres away.

Few people walk, although the routes along tree-laden streets and through Western Park or Victoria Park are among the city’s most beautiful. And there are excellent bus services.

Just yesterday the council decided to plan a 50 per cent reduction in carbon emissions in Auckland over the next 10 years. Seriously: why are all those people in Ponsonby still driving to work? What planet do they think they’re living on?

 ?? Photo / Michael Craig ?? “Maniacs” regularly speed up and down Collingwoo­d St, locals say.
Photo / Michael Craig “Maniacs” regularly speed up and down Collingwoo­d St, locals say.

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