Vital link road to be improved
Vital link road to be improved
An important road
link to the East Coast will soon be the focus of
improvements to limit the impact storms and floods have on
it.
Wainui Road, which links Ōhope to Ōpōtiki
around Ōhiwa Harbour, is the focus of a joint project
between Bay of Plenty Regional Council, Whakatāne District
Council and Ōpōtiki District Council to reduce the impact
flooding has on it.
The recommendation for improving
the road came from a study into Eastern Bay of Plenty route
security by the New Zealand Transport Agency (NZTA). The
study looked at key routes used to transport goods, services
and people across the eastern Bay, and identified all the
sites where traffic flows were disrupted due to storm events
before ranking them in terms of significance and how easy
and cost effective they were to fix.
Three key flood
prone sites on Wainui Road will be the focus of the
improvements: near Te Kooti Road; near Cheddar Valley; and
the SH2/Wainui Road intersection at Matekerepu.
Bay of
Plenty Regional Council has made $1.7million funding for the
improvements available from its Infrastructure Fund. NZTA
will also seek further funding for improvements on the state
highways between SH2/Wainui Road intersection and
Opotiki.
Regional Council Chairman John Cronin said
using the Infrastructure fund to help improve important
transport routes to the east coast was a great example of
how the fund can benefit the whole region.
“We need
to have robust networks in the region to transport both our
people and our goods to where they need to go – this
project will help with that,” Mr Cronin said.
The
project will be a joint effort between the councils and
NZTA, according to Whakatāne District Council Mayor Tony
Bonne.
“It’s been great to see the collaboration
occurring already, and I’m looking forward to seeing this
continue through the project,” Mr Bonne
said.
Ōpōtiki District Council Mayor John Forbes
said while physical work on the road was unlikely to begin
until early next year, it was great to see work starting
that would help reduce the impact storms had on isolating
the Ōpōtiki District from the rest of the
region.
“This road is an essential lifeline for
Opotiki and anything that will ensure our roads remain open
and accessible during storms is terrific news,” Mr Forbes
said. “It will also be good for the businesses both in
Opotiki and the wider region that rely on road transport to
get their goods to and from market.”
The improvement
works for all sites are expected to be a mix of river/stream
flow and alignment improvements, possibly stop-banking, and
raising sections of the
road.
ends