Whanganui Chronicle

Recycled port materials to be used in bomb platform build

Council, port company seeking consent to begin dredging around the wharves

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Aplatform for kids to do bombs as part of Whanganui’s port revitalisa­tion project could be built out of repurposed material from the wider project.

That news comes as two of the organisati­ons working on the Te Pū waha Whanganui Port revitalisa­tion project announced they had reached a milestone this week by lodging an applicatio­n to carry out dredging around the wharves.

The applicatio­n — by the Whanganui District Council and the Whanganui Port Operating Company — requests consent to dredge the areas immediatel­y around the three main wharves, and the proposed vessel lifting infrastruc­ture to allow access for vessels to the port.

It will also include dredging for the Wharf St public boat ramp and a new area to the south of the ramp where the diving and bombing platform has been proposed.

For help with what that platform could look like Te Pū waha representa­tives will be talking to kura for rangatahi feedback.

The idea of encouragin­g kura to swim, bomb and dive away from the dangers of the public boat ramp and the developmen­t at the port was discussed at the recent iwi and hapū port walkthroug­h, the council said.

“There was certainly a murmur of excitement about the plans, our rangatahi are looking for safe spaces to swim and enjoy our awa so to potentiall­y be able to offer that is fantastic,” Te Pū waha project director Hayden Turoa said.

The council said the final design is intended to be created locally, using recycled materials from the port wharves, with an opportunit­y for Ucol to support the building of the structure.

Port Operating Company director Declan Millin said he was pleased to see the dredging consent lodged.

“The consent applicatio­n is a milestone for this project, particular­ly as we prepare for constructi­on tenders to be released in the New Year.

“Our project team, alongside Te Mata Pūau (local hapū), have been flat out preparing this consent which will not only ensure continued vessel access to the port and new hardstand site, but will also create a safe swimming space for our rangatahi.”

The dredging consent seeks to remove sediment from an area to the south of the existing public boat ramp, where a bombing and swimming platform is proposed to be developed in late 2023.

The lodging of consent is only one step in what has been an ongoing process.

“While the lodging of the consent is technicall­y necessary, engagement with hapū and the community over the dredging has been under way for some time under the Te Awa Tupua framework,” Hayden Turoa said.

“And this process will continue to be applied to ensure that the particular­s of dredging are guided in real time in line with the abundance mindset of Te Pū waha.”

Whanganui Port project manager Phil Wardale said getting the consent in before Christmas meant it would allow access to the heavy pavement handstand where Q-west’s mobile boat hoist will operate from.

“Along with continued access to the port and public boat ramp,” he said.

The applicatio­n will be known as the ‘Stage 1 dredging area’ with the expectatio­n that it will be processed promptly by Horizons early in the New Year.

“This will allow the project and the public confidence that a consent is held for the important dredging activity at the port, which is an activity included in the regional One Plan,” Wardale said.

The consent will be sought for a period of two years, with the expectatio­n that dredging would occur when required during and after the completion of the upgraded infrastruc­ture including the wharves, council said.

The sediment will likely be dredged using what is known as a cutter suction dredge where the material is vacuumed up via a pump and then discharged out down a pipe where it can rejoin the flow of the awa, downstream of Wharf One.

Council had not yet decided whether the port will acquire a purpose-built machine or will procure a contractor with suitable equipment to complete the work.

Procuremen­t for the dredging solution is expected to get under way in the second quarter of 2023, while in the interim the port’s own barge will undertake all dredging works.

It is expected the Stage 1 dredging consent will be approved in the first half of 2023, in time for the arrival of Q-west’s mobile boat hoist with 380-tonne lift capacity.

 ?? PHOTO / SUPPLIED ?? Cashmore Contractin­g’s longreach excavator doing dredging work at the Wharf St boat ramp.
PHOTO / SUPPLIED Cashmore Contractin­g’s longreach excavator doing dredging work at the Wharf St boat ramp.

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