The Northern Advocate

Highway to start within 10 yrs

Minister says Govt ‘committed’ to new road to the north

- Sarah Curtis

Work on an alternativ­e four-lane highway to Northland will begin within 10 years, Transport Minister Simeon Brown says. However, planning is only in the early stages and the cost of the project won’t be known until at least August.

Speaking to media during a site tour of the current Brynderwyn­s resilience project this week, Brown said he didn’t know if work on the new highway would start during the current Government’s term but a lot of work would be undertaken to ensure the Government knew what the alternativ­e route would be.

He said they wanted to get it under constructi­on as quickly as possible, and that it would likely happen “much quicker” than 10 years.

“My message is this [the alternativ­e route] is the number one priority going forward.

“I can’t give an exact time frame on it just yet but our Government is committed to this route, committed to unlocking all funding and financing options to get it done as quickly as possible, and also we’ve put fast-tracking consenting on the table, which means major infrastruc­ture like this doesn’t take a decade to consent.”

Brown claimed no work had started on the alternativ­e for the past six years.

The last Government’s cancellati­on of the Roads of National Significan­ce (RONS) programme was “an appalling decision”, Brown said.

“We’re re-starting it [RONS] because we know that we need to connect our regions and our cities with resilient, highqualit­y, infrastruc­ture and that’s what we’ve committed to as a Government.”

Brown said an alternativ­e highway was needed if economic growth opportunit­ies were to be unlocked in Northland.

“We know that the Warkworth to Te Hana section — that is also critically important — will unlock $500 million of GDP on an annual basis to our economy.”

More details, including an estimated cost for the new Northland highway, would be released in August or September as part of the New Zealand Transport Agency (NZTA) Waka Kotahi’s national land transport programme.

“We want all funding and financing options on the table to get infrastruc­ture built faster and sooner in New Zealand,” Brown said.

The Government was committed, he said, to “unblocking the red and green tape that makes it so hard to get things done in New Zealand”.

Resilience work, for which $61 million funding was approved, started on the fragile Brynderwyn­s route on February 26.

The road reopens this Thursday for six days over Easter before closing again from April 3 until May 12.

During Tuesday’s site visit, Fulton Hogan project director Ashley Cooper said the remaining work would continue with the road open and the whole project was expected to be finished by Christmas.

Brown said the decision to close the road was “tough” and he knew it had caused inconvenie­nce, especially for freight operators forced to take the longest of three detour routes. However, he was confident once operators saw the work that had been done, they would appreciate that closing the road was the quickest, safest, way to enable the resilience work it so desperatel­y needed.

The road, which carries up to 15,000 vehicles daily, had been closed eight times since 2022.

Northland had suffered because of it, Brown said.

The upgrade work being done on it would mean it would last another seven to 10 years.

While that wasn’t a long-term solution, it was crucial in buying the Government the time it needed to scope and begin building the alternativ­e four-lane highway to Northland, to which it had committed last year, Brown said.

“This is about making sure that the route is resilient while the work starts on the alternativ­e.”

Cooper said the aim of the Brynderwyn’s project was to create additional space on the corridor, which would allow better management for future events on the hill without disrupting traffic. In severe weather events, it would provide room into which to clear slips and debris, minimising the need for lengthy, major closures. It could also provide access for maintenanc­e and emergency vehicles.

“It’s not about making it a three or four-lane highway; that’s not the purpose. It’s about resilience to make sure that going forward — because they can’t stop the slips — we can reduce the likelihood of them by laying the land back.

“But the geology means it’s constantly on the move up there.

“Things will happen and who knows

"My message is this [the alternativ­e route] is the number one priority going forward." Transport Minister Simeon Brown

what weather events we’ll get but it’s about being able to deal with those events while maintainin­g two lanes of traffic on the hill,” Cooper said.

He was pleased with the progress, which was on schedule and on budget; in fact, earthworks were ahead of schedule.

Earthworks had been completed on the northernmo­st section of the road and drainage and pavement work had started there. Earthworks on the southern section were also almost complete.

Work around the waterfall area was expected to start after Easter as negotiatio­ns were still underway with iwi to discuss what the final profile would look like.

Contractor­s had been working around the clock clearing vegetation and had shifted more than 127,000 cubic metres of dirt to shore up hills with benching and better drainage. About 25,000cu m of earth was still to be moved.

In some places, retaining walls were being installed to prevent underslips. Most of the hill was being widened by trimming back and in some places, a significan­t amount of soil had to be removed.

Newly created benched slopes were being erosion-proofed with netting and grassing.

Motorists familiar with the route would notice significan­t changes, Cooper said.

NZTA regional relationsh­ips director Steve Mutton said he hoped the brief re-opening of the road would provide some reprieve for motorists and truckies before the final closure block next month.

“We know there is considerab­le interest in the work that has been completed during the closure to date; however, we’d like to remind people that there is strictly no stopping on any state highways unless there is an emergency.

“During the six-day reopening, people can expect to see safety measures in place near to areas crews have been working.

“We ask all road users to allow extra time for their journey as traffic volumes will be increased over the holiday period,” Mutton said.

"During the sixday reopening, people can expect to see safety measures in place near to areas crews have been working."

Director Regional Relationsh­ips NZTA Steve Mutton

 ?? PHOTOS / MICHAEL CUNNINGHAM ?? Contractor­s working on the Brynderwyn Hills resilience roading project have moved about 127,000 cubic metres of soil so far. Another 25,000cu m is expected to be shifted during a final closure of the road next month.
Transport Minister Simeon Brown (centre) was onsite this week in the Brynderwyn Hills stretch of SH1 for a progress update on resilience works he says will “buy the Government time” to build a highway to Northland.
PHOTOS / MICHAEL CUNNINGHAM Contractor­s working on the Brynderwyn Hills resilience roading project have moved about 127,000 cubic metres of soil so far. Another 25,000cu m is expected to be shifted during a final closure of the road next month. Transport Minister Simeon Brown (centre) was onsite this week in the Brynderwyn Hills stretch of SH1 for a progress update on resilience works he says will “buy the Government time” to build a highway to Northland.
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 ?? ?? Excavators at work near Waterfall Corner as part of roading resilience work underway in the Brynderwyn Hills.
Excavators at work near Waterfall Corner as part of roading resilience work underway in the Brynderwyn Hills.

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