Weekend Herald

Workers complete southbound CRL track

- Jamie Lyth

The first of the two 3.45km tracks that make up the City Rail Link has been laid — now new drone footage has been released giving commuters a sneak peek.

The last piece of the southbound track, which will carry trains from Waitemata¯ (Britomart) to Maungawhau Station was laid this week.

The footage takes viewers along the newly completed track and out through the Victoria St and Karangaa-Hape stations.

City Rail Link chief executive Dr Sean Sweeney said the milestone was one of the most significan­t achievemen­ts of the project.

“It was challengin­g undergroun­d work where the terrain was steep and tunnel curves tight, but it helps mark a big physical crossover from a heavy constructi­on project to the developmen­t of what will become a worldclass railway with a huge impact on Aucklander’s lives.”

Installati­on of the first track began in August 2022. Link Alliance and Martinus NZ installed the track on what is one of the steepest sections of railway in New Zealand.

From Waitemata¯, which sits below sea level, the track climbs around 70m to Maungawhau. At its deepest point, the track runs 42m underneath Auckland’s busy Karanga-a-Hape.

In the tunnel near Te Waihorotiu Station in central Auckland, two of the track laying team, Alexandra Favre, a Link Alliance track engineer, and Amy Khune, a Martinus surveyor, locked into place the last of more than 21,000 rail clips that secure steel track weighing 340 tonnes in total to their foundation­s.

Laying the track included pouring

4400 tonnes of concrete and completing more than 280 rail welds, which smooth out the “clicketycl­ack” joins where track sections meet, to give people a smoother ride, CRL said.

Martinus NZ general manager Graham Bradley also acknowledg­ed the huge undertakin­g that began during the Covid pandemic.

Working together to bring CRL to life as a transforma­tional project is something we’re all really proud to be a part of.

Graham Bradley

“We assembled teams who have outstandin­g expertise and commitment to getting the mahi done, often 24/7. A restricted rail corridor brings all sorts of challenges that you can never expect and brings out the best in people. Working together to bring CRL to life as a transforma­tional project is something we’re all really proud to be a part of,” Bradley said.

Laying the track successful­ly is one part of a complex tunnel fit-out under way that includes the installati­on of electrical, mechanical, hydraulic, safety and communicat­ions systems.

Work to fit out the line in the second CRL tunnel, which will carry trains north from Maungawhau Station to Waitemata¯, will be completed next year, CRL said.

 ?? ?? Workers mark completion of the southbound CRL track between Britomart to Maungawhau stations.
Workers mark completion of the southbound CRL track between Britomart to Maungawhau stations.

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