Waikato Times

What a third bridge for town might look like

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Ke-Xin Li

Plans are afoot to reshape the Cambridge’s transport system over coming decades and a new bridge to the centre is a big part of it.

The district council is hoping to secure funding to improve its transport, include building a third bridge, and public feedback will help them shape a compelling business case.

Waipā district mayor Susan O’Regan said the business case will be wider than just a bridge and the project will define how people move around Cambridge for decades to come.

District council transporta­tion manager Bryan Hudson said they are envisionin­g an ambitious form of transport that will protect the residentia­l environmen­t as the proposal will have wider impact than just roads.

“I think people would value quieter streets and nicer looking streets than big roads.” Three plans were designed and one plan stood out as the preferred option. It’s now out for public feedback till March 29.

The option includes making main streets safer for walking and cycling, reducing congestion, more buses to Hamilton and a bus in Cambridge.

The proposals assume that more people, particular­ly elderly, will live in Waipā - 60% more by 2051 (compared to 2018) while the number of over 65s is expected to double.

As a result, the town bridges will hit capacity in 30 years.

Today, 28,100 vehicles cross the Waikato River in Cambridge each day - 53% use the Fergusson Bridge, and 47% traverse Victoria Bridge.

While Victoria Bridge is more convenient, the weight limit and narrowness turn many away.

A new bridge is expected to be more comfortabl­e for people.

Hudson said the new bridge will be wide enough to cater all kinds of transport: cars, trucks, cyclists, pedestrian­s and scooters. And Victoria Bridge, with a remaining life estimated to be 25 to 30 years, will change to pedestrian­s and cyclists only.

The exact location of the bridge is yet to be finalised until funding and assessment­s are done, but the council is looking close to the town centre as traffic survey data and modelling of future traffic patterns show most trips head into town.

The project will be expensive and funding will be critical, said Hudson.

“It’s not in the tens of millions of dollars over that time period, it’s in the hundreds of millions of dollars.”

He said although the public may not be transport experts, but their input is valuable. Public can submit feedback from now until March 29.

 ?? CHRISTEL YARDLEY/WAIKATO TIMES ?? Victoria Bridge has a remaining life estimate of 25 to 30 years. Once a new bridge is built, it will retire to a walking and cycling only bridge.
CHRISTEL YARDLEY/WAIKATO TIMES Victoria Bridge has a remaining life estimate of 25 to 30 years. Once a new bridge is built, it will retire to a walking and cycling only bridge.

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