Maritzburg Sun (South Africa)

Engineer experts contracted to fast track N2 repairs

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With the vital N2 corridor in Durban damaged to the extent that the road is impassable in certain sections, following the recent flooding in KwaZulu-Natal, an existing contract related to settlement repair of the route has been fast-tracked by the South African National Roads Agency (Sanral).

Zutari was awarded the contract following a competitiv­e tender early last year. The engineerin­g design and advisory services company is now playing a major role in devising the most cost-effective and resilient solution to repair a section of the route relating to its contract.

“We have effectivel­y pulled together significan­t resources and expertise as quickly as possible to assist to the best of our capabiliti­es,” said Zutari technical director Tashna Margo. This includes advising on measures to ensure human life is protected and quickly restoring the damaging impact of the floods on key infrastruc­ture.

In addition, dams expertise leader Dr. Frank Denys and senior water resources engineer Martin Kleynhans have been called upon to assist in assessing the flood damage as part of Zutari’s urban stormwater and flooding expertise. “Basically, we are conducting a condition assessment to ascertain the extent of the damage, assess what repairs can be done and what not, and provide options as to the way forward,” Denys explained.

A contributi­ng factor has been the role played by the existing slope instabilit­ies in the province. KwaZulu-Natal is known for slope instabilit­y as it relates to the local geology and topography. Floods and climate change influence this risk.

“There is a broader narrative around this and how, with climate change and design and constructi­on, we need to assess risk and design differentl­y for more resilient infrastruc­ture,” said Dr. Gabi Wojtowitz, a geotechnic­al engineer and associate design director at Zutari.

“It also speaks to risk classes and defining areas not to develop in. Perhaps a similar risk classifica­tion for developmen­t in respect to slope instabilit­y could be drawn up as to what is currently used for dolomitic ground conditions where specific measures are imposed for high-risk areas,” she suggested.

Wojtowitz concurs that the catastroph­ic flooding has increased the focus on climate change as an area of serious concern. She notes that such extreme weather events are likely to become more extreme and common in the future. This speaks to the need for resilient infrastruc­ture and risk mitigation, as well as bringing human-centred and environmen­tally aware design to bear.

“If we highlight potential issues that are not responded to, and then these become the cause of a disaster scenario, it is a much harder scenario to rectify after the fact. Not that this was not an extreme event; it certainly was. However, there are definite multiple underlying contributi­ng factors that maybe made it worse than it should have been. It does suggest this could be an example of what is likely to occur more regularly in future,” added Dr. James Cullis, technical director and sustainabi­lity expertise leader at Zutari.

 ?? ?? Tashna Margo, the technical director at Zutari, the company contracted by Sanral to fast track the repairs to the flood-damaged N2 highway.
Tashna Margo, the technical director at Zutari, the company contracted by Sanral to fast track the repairs to the flood-damaged N2 highway.

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