The Northern Advocate

$9M roundabout for SH10

Work to make dangerous intersecti­on safer will start this year after grant from PGF

- Peter de Graaf

Work to build a roundabout at one of the North’s most loathed intersecti­ons is due to begin by the middle of this year. The Waipapa Rd-State Highway 10 intersecti­on near Kerikeri is infamous for its congestion and risk, and has been the subject of lobbying by councils and local residents for nearly 30 30 years.

The delays had looked set to continue even longer but a grant of up to $9 million from the coalition government’s Provincial Growth Fund (PGF) has bumped it up the NZ Transport Agency’s to-do list.

During a site blessing by local hapu¯ Nga¯ti Rehia on January 9, Regional Economic Developmen­t Minister Shane Jones said the Waipapa roundabout, which had “suffered the gestation of some sort of dinosaur”, was the first roading project to benefit from the billion-dollar-a-year fund.

The idea was to use the PGF to speed up some vital roading projects and “get some of the more egregious cases of road failure fixed up”.

Jones said $9m was a “stupendous amount” for a Northland roading project so he urged contractor­s to “sharpen their pencils” and deliver well within budget.

An emotional Ann Court, who started campaignin­g for the roundabout 29 years ago, long before she became a district councillor, said motorists would no longer have to risk their lives running the gauntlet of the intersecti­on or get stuck for long periods at 5pm.

The roundabout came close to being built 10 years ago but a new government was elected with different priorities.

The lesson was that if you believed something was important “you stick at it, you never give up”.

Raewyn Bleakley, an NZ Transport Agency general manager, said roading consultant­s Opus had started detailed design work for the roundabout in November, with surveying and geotechnic­al testing carried out in December.

A preferred contractor would be named by the end of March with “enabling works” such as moving undergroun­d utilities to start in mid2019.

The completion date had yet to be confirmed. NZTA still had to buy some land before the project could go ahead.

“It’s about safety, but it’s more than that. It’s also about community and economic developmen­t,” Bleakley said. The site was blessed by Nga¯ti Rehia kaumatua Arena Munro. Several other hapu¯ were represente­d as was Nga¯puhi chairman Sonny Tau.

Jones said the next roading project to be funded by the PGF would be a roundabout at the Loop Rd junction of SH1 and SH15 south of Whanga¯rei. The Loop Rd intersecti­on was also notoriousl­y unsafe and heavily used by logging trucks.

That project is due to begin in February or March this year and be completed in 2020.

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 ?? Photos / Peter de Graaf ?? Nga¯ ti Rehia kaumatua Arena Munro (second from right, in the suit) blesses the roundabout project with the Waipapa Rd-SH10 intersecti­on in the background. INSET: Far North District councillor Ann Court has been lobbying for the roundabout for 29 years.
Photos / Peter de Graaf Nga¯ ti Rehia kaumatua Arena Munro (second from right, in the suit) blesses the roundabout project with the Waipapa Rd-SH10 intersecti­on in the background. INSET: Far North District councillor Ann Court has been lobbying for the roundabout for 29 years.
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