$53m safety and efficiency boost for Auckland‘s State Highway 16

In Uncategorized2 MinutesBy NZ Trucking magazineFebruary 13, 2018

A stretch of Auckland‘s State Highway 16 between Brigham Creek and Waimauku is set to get a $53 million upgrade that will include a new roundabout, extra lanes, safety barriers to prevent head-on crashes and more space for pedestrians and cyclists.

The NZ Transport Agency board has approved funding for the design and construction of the project, which is part of the government‘s $600 million Safe Roads programme.

Between 2006 and 2015, there were four people killed and 30 seriously injured on this stretch of road. Many deaths and injuries were caused by head-on crashes or drivers running off the road into trees, poles or deep ditches.

NZTA‘s system design manager Brett Gliddon says the safety improvements will help ensure that simple mistakes won‘t cost lives or leave people seriously injured in the future.

The upgrade will introduce short to medium term solutions to improve safety and efficiency ahead of other longer term infrastructure projects to address expected urban growth in northwest Auckland. It will also coordinate with projects in the Kumeu, Huapai and Waimauku urban centres along SH16 to ensure consistency in standards and treatment.

“Improvements will include extra lanes between Brigham Creek and Taupaki roundabout to help with travel times, a flush median to give drivers more room and a safe place to turn, and a roundabout at the SH16/Coatesville Riverhead Highway intersection to help traffic flow,” says Gliddon.

Flexible road safety barriers will be put along sections of the route. The barriers help reduce road deaths by 70 to 80 percent.

Gliddon says the funding approval meant the team could finalise the design and start construction in late 2018, with the project being carried out in stages over three years. The section between Huapai and Waimauku will be started first and is expected to take just over 12 months. The Brigham Creek to Kumeu section is planned to start in February 2019 and finish in February 2021.

More information about the safety improvements can be found on the Transport Agency website www.nzta.govt.nz/bc2w

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