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Allan Barber welcomes the safer faster extension of Auckland's northern motorway into Northland and calls for a speeded up process to get it all the way to Whangarei

Rural News / opinion
Allan Barber welcomes the safer faster extension of Auckland's northern motorway into Northland and calls for a speeded up process to get it all the way to Whangarei
Puhoi-Warkworth market extension
The Ara Tūhono – Pūhoi to Warkworth motorway is now open. The new route provides a safer journey connecting Tamaki Makaurau to Te Tai Tokerau.

After many rumours and many delays the Puhoi to Warkworth section of the Ara Tuhono motorway finally opened early morning two Mondays ago, as did the Matakana link road which has been patiently awaiting completion of the motorway for several months. Apart from the joy of a faster journey to reach Warkworth from the south, the other major cause for celebration is the immediate avoidance of the notorious Hill Street intersection with its six streams of traffic meeting at the traffic lights on the old State Highway 1. Driving into Warkworth from Matakana is now an absolute breeze and weekend traffic queues should be a thing of the past.   

I was fortunate enough to be taken on a tour of the new motorway a few weeks ago which gave me the chance to appreciate the design and engineering and learn about the project’s use of waste material to cut and fill as the construction progressed. The largest cut was a 70 metre rock face from which 1.2 million cubic metres was removed and two thirds reused as fill. The erosion control programme was designed in house by the project team; it won an international award and praise from Auckland Council for the sediment control practices during the bulk earthworks.

The innovative environmental plan involved different sediment control systems for runoff during construction, managed by chemically treated sediment control ponds, and runoff from the completed motorway which is passed through planted wetland ponds before being discharged offsite. At the narrowest part of the motorway through a mature kauri forest, the least number of trees possible were removed to allow construction to take place. In compensation for the removal of native species across the project site over a million trees and vegetation were planted the length of the motorway.

Robert Jones, Project Manager for NX2, the JV between Fletchers and Spanish construction company Acciona that won the contract, explained the delayed completion resulted from two unforeseen obstacles – Covid which delayed work for months on end over the last three years and the horrendous weather since last spring. A number of the workforce from the north didn’t return after lockdowns, while staff absenteeism for sickness reasons hindered completion right through to the end.

Nevertheless Jones who also project managed the motorway build from Orewa to Puhoi between 2004 and 2008 was proud of the project’s environmental control, the removal and reuse of a massive amount of earthworks material, and the project’s excellent safety record. Less satisfying was the need to negotiate the final amount of cost overruns with NZTA which are rumoured to have amounted to $170 million.

The pleasure of the motorway’s completion is in stark contrast to the reality of the dreadful road further north. The last National government was responsible for initiating the Puhoi to Warkworth stretch which was started in 2016, while its intention to build the next section to Wellsford was scuppered by the 2017 Labour/NZ First coalition with significant assistance from the Green party and Julie Anne Genter as Associate Minister of Transport. Her solution was to install some median barriers on the extremely unsafe stretch of highway through the Dome Valley between Warkworth and Wellsford.

The fact sheet put out by NZTA (it wasn’t called Waka Kotahi then) in 2017 predicted this stage of the Roads of National Significance would be finished by 2026, five years after the anticipated completion of the Warkworth section. It forecast a time saving of seven minutes to Te Hana, north of Wellsford, for cars and more than 10 minutes for trucks while increasing average speeds from 70 km/h to 95 km/h and reducing heavy vehicle movements through Wellsford by 1400 and cars by 14,000 per day. At the time the indicative route was predicted to reduce deaths and serious injuries by 80%. The recent run of bad weather has seen the closure of SH1 at Brynderwyn which only serves to highlight the drastic need for this road.

The latest information on the NZTA website, dated 2021, states this section of motorway is not planned to start during the present decade, although the designated route and consents are making their way through the Environment Court. The tragedy of this ridiculously delayed process is the complete lack of any plan to extend the motorway to Whangarei which would contribute enormous economic benefits to Northland and is unlikely to be achieved before 2050 at the earliest because of budget constraints and New Zealand’s notoriously slow delivery of major projects.

The distance to Te Hana is 24 km compared with 18.6 km from Puhoi to Warkworth, while the remaining portion to Whangarei would be 75 km. At the present rate of progress, Northland residents and businesses will be lucky to see the motorway built this century. This total neglect of the Far North is an indictment on successive governments, especially the Labour dominant ones since 2017, which have ignored the social and economic benefits of connecting regions and communities through investment in decent infrastructure. At the same time there have been port studies suggesting Auckland’s main port should be relocated to Marsden Point when there is not even a viable rail service, let alone a proper highway.

At the 2020 general election the National party promised to build a four lane highway to Whangarei including a tolled tunnel through the Brynderwyns by 2040, but has not yet announced whether that undertaking will be part of its regional development plan at this year’s election. The economic benefit of improving road access to the north is highlighted by a comparison with Otago where tourism contributes almost twice as high a percentage to the regional GDP as Northland. Admittedly Northland has a greater proportion of heavy industry, while Otago’s tourism is boosted by Queenstown and winter sports, but the contrast is still significant.

The completion of the latest motorway underlines what everyone knows intuitively – large infrastructure projects meet a long overdue need, they are generally delivered late and over budget, and planning for the next stage is already lagging well behind any desirable timeframe.


Current schedule and saleyard prices are available in the right-hand menu of the Rural section of this website.

M2 Bull

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36 Comments

> At the 2020 general election the National party promised to build a four lane highway to Whangarei including a tolled tunnel through the Brynderwyns by 2040

About as likely to happen this century as kiwibuild.  Puhoi to Warkworth was the easy bit, and that already used the budget National earmarked to go all the way to Wellsford.

Just build the Wellsford by-pass.  You get 80% of the timesavings for 5% of the cost.  Spend a fraction of the rest on median barriers all the way to Whangarei.  That would be a real investment, an investment in lives saved.

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4

And when the extra traffic comes off the motorway , where does it go ? Onto existing roads. 

4 lanes are only justified on holiday weekends , hence the name holiday highway.

The most effective transport solution for Northland would be to complete the Mardsen point railway , and get the logging traffic running there onto rail.

Labour has pumped millions onto the Northland railway for this, but the railway hasn't been maintained for 40 years , so it is still slow. 

The tunnel through the hill should be a railway tunnel ,not road.

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4

Your comments out you as a moron that (i) hasn't used the tunnel or (ii) understand the area and the traffic issues. 

There is nothing "Holiday" about it.

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3

No need to trade insults when you can trade data instead.

North of Wellsford your looking at 10K vehicle movements per day.

Single lane arterials in Auckland like dominion road manage 25K movements a day, so I fail to see how a 4 lane expressway is justified.

https://maphub.nzta.govt.nz/public/?appid=31305d4c1c794c1188a87da0d3e85…

https://at.govt.nz/about-us/reports-publications/traffic-counts/

 

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4

Thanks for reinforcing my point. Most are not going north to Wellsford. 

Adding to that there are thousands of sections coming on-line in Warkworth. People using this road are not going on holiday.

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2

If not on holiday, to work perhaps?  If so, I think it rather moronic to plan for thousands of sections that require commuting via private vehicle.

This is not going to work within a decade.

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4

So you agree with the OP, we don't need 4 lanes to Wellsford and Whangerei? 

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Maybe you are new to this site Hugh. solardb is one of the many masters of moronic comments!

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1

you probably need 2 lanes , driving with one hand....

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Back at you pal! You are almost as pompous as PDK!

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Couple of quick questions Allan.
1. Have you heard of climate change?

2. Would you still find the motorway such a pleasure if you had to pay its true cost? Just the construction costs alone run $10-$20 per trip (depending on how you reckon financing costs etc), and that's not even counting climate change.

I get that a lot of locals love it, but they're not paying for it. I suspect they would still love it at 10 times the cost.

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7

Actually an improved roading network would REDUCE emissions. Anyone who tried to get through to Puhoi for the entire Christmas period and got stuck in traffic for over 40 minutes on a trip that should have take 5 minutes will tell you.

Hats off to National on starting this project, its pretty clear that if work had not already started then Labour would have killed the entire project. Its probably only fitting that the opening comes a few months before National get back in, they will probably complete the rest of it.

 

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Heard about induced traffic?

 

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6

Absolute bollocks. Any emissions save by reducing traffic idling over a few hours a couple of times a year would never ever ever off-set the huge carbon cost of building this monstrosity. 

Here's a tip, when you know nothing about about a subject keep your mouth shut unless you're asking a question to find out more. 

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4

You need to take your own advice!

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I do this for a living and everything I said is correct. 

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Improved roading networks INCREASE emissions.  Anyone who tried to get through to Puhoi for the entire Christmas period would have seen what a discouragement the congestion was to travel.  Imagine how many extra trips would happen without that congestion.  

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5

All major roads built in the last 10 years should be told until their 10th birthday. All bypasses (Taupo, Huntley) etc. Just a few dollars so that peopl estill use the road.

We have a national tolling standard, we just don't roll it out.

Picking on individual roads like you are and having the debate every time is just silly.

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0

Climate change. Climate emergency. Don’t ask us.Ask the government. Ask them in line with your question over true cost, why they have sanctioned construction and operation of a wide bodied jet international in Central Otago. And whilst at it, ask their even more loquacious urgent climate emergency protagonist brethren, The Greens, why they haven’t raised a single squeak about it.

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Pretty obvious some of you guys never use this stretch of road. Great job by National and now 6 years later, the Labour government cannot even fix potholes.

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One of the problems with these big projects is they drain all the road maintenance money . when they were building the Kopu bridge near Thames, all the other Coromandel roads got less money , and fell to bits .So no surprise there, though the weather has certainly caused alot of problems too.  

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4

There is a simple solution to that . Stop spending countless billions on moronic social engineering projects and race based policies and spend more on infrastructure! 

If we had a 4 lane motorway from Northland to Invercargill it would revolutionise the country as people and goods would move in safe and speedy manner. But no, our brain dead politicians keep throwing good money after bad at our backward 1800's railway!

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It's national that cut the road maintenance budget for the entire roading network to pay for these short mega motorways.

Maintenance is a long term thing.  You can cut the budget and make short-term savings, but in the long term you get... potholes.

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NZTA will celebrate however they should be ASHAMED of how over budget and overtime this was (like all of their projects). Their delivery team is pathetic and have no shame in raking in taxpayer dollars while they fail miserably with any major project they touch. 

It doesn't have to be this way and people should not accept it - but it does seem they are pretty much untouchable? Where is the accountability? 

Great this road is completed but goddam... it is years late!!! 

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4

We're barely able to cover the costs of our current roading infrastructure and he's clamouring to build more. 

What planet is this guy living on? Oh that's right looking at his picture he's one of the ones that will be dead pretty soon and will leave the next generation to clear up his mess

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6

"The tragedy of this ridiculously delayed process is the complete lack of any plan to extend the motorway to Whangarei which would contribute enormous economic benefits to Northland"

It's absolutely disgraceful you are referred to as a journalist on this site. Please actually provide data on the enormous economic benefits you mention. As for your environment washing, again disgraceful. Actually provide some data on the overall environmental impact this project has had, not on the way they tried to mitigate this huge cost. Like I said an absolute disgrace. 

There are no enormous economic benefits to Northland, National had to bypass the normal process and come up with a "RONS" Programme because the figures didn't stack up. 

It's very nice you and a few other people have a slightly nicer ride between Auckland and Warkworth but the absolutely tragedy is that as a nation we sunk this much of our limited resources into such a worthless project. 

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6

You are an absolute half-wit!

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Thanks DD62, but as I see no actual data. 

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3

What a bizzare story,

The motorway was rammed though by National to enable subdivision all the way to Wellsford.

For those that cant remember Wellsford is in Auckland province and nothing to do with Northland, those poor devils will continue to compete with the logging trucks on the Bryndwns.

So North Auckland will start to look like Dreary, typo, Drury.

Just sit back and watch, the changes are obvious already.

 

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3

I can't be arsed to pull all the relevant reports out to show what a crock of shit this article is so I'll just link some articles by some amateur bloggers who do a much better job of describing the value of this piece of crap project over the last few years than this so called journalist ever could

https://www.greaterauckland.org.nz/2023/06/21/puhoi-to-warkworth-opens/

https://www.greaterauckland.org.nz/2015/08/31/the-puhoi-to-warkworth-bu…

https://www.greaterauckland.org.nz/2014/09/22/economics-and-the-puhoi-w…

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2

As I said you are a half-wit! You haven' provided one relevant or factual piece of data, at the same time berating anybody else who doesn't agree with you. Graphs of GDP - what a joke!

What is it you do? Green party/Greenpiece troll? Or one of the countless muppets sitting in an overpriced Wellington office producing reports know one reads!

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"Or one of the countless muppets sitting in an overpriced Wellington office producing reports"

No, I didn't write the report that got this shit project across the line. 

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1

Agnostium et al

I may be a crap journalist, but at least my opinion piece has provoked plenty of comment, some positive and some negative, which is the whole point of opinion pieces. I did cite the contrast between tourism's contribution to Otago's GDP with Northland's as one relevant piece of data.

If you want informed scientific justification, carry on reading your quoted studies and avoid pieces like mine!

 

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.

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I have no idea if you're a crap journalist, hard to say because:

1- this isn't journalism

2 - this is the only article of yours that I've read.

The issue is that you are presenting opinion as fact with no evidence. It is misinformation. 

Comment is free, facts are sacred. 

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It is labelled at the very top as opinion.Perhaps it could be a bit more prominent.

I also appreciate it when the author takes the time to reply to comments, or provide clarification.

I obviously don't agree with the point of view, but do appreciate both sides facts / opinions, when presented with a reasonable amount of intelligence.

One interesting comment in the greater Auckland discussion, a railway deviation from mareretu via Waipu to Marsden point, would not require a major tunnel, and would knock an hour or 2 off the journey.

 

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