Think outside the box to ease Auckland’s congestion
Think outside the box to ease Auckland’s
congestion
National Road Carriers wants to see more new thinking to gain some quick wins in the battle against Auckland’s traffic congestion.
CEO David Aitken says there are some positive long-term solutions for Auckland’s traffic and transport problems planned but we need to see main arterial freight routes throughout Auckland de-congested now, for the benefit of all road users.
“We want to see some quick wins for everybody but it
will need some new ideas.”
The Benefits of Decongestion
Report released two months ago showed congestion on
Auckland’s roads was costing the economy between $1.2 and
$2 billion a year in lost productivity.
Major
infra-structure projects like the East West link between
Sylvia Park and Onehunga were still required said Mr Aitken,
as well as improvements in public transport and park and
ride facilities to get single occupant vehicles off the
roads.
“Using existing roads better is the key to
a quick fix and a solution for all road users,” said Mr
Aitken. “Everybody wins.”
The organisation’s focus
is on main arterial roads between industrial and commercial
areas throughout the city and those roads which service the
waterfront port, the inland ports, including the Te Papapa
Metroport and container parks.
Mr Aitken has already
raised the prospect of no parking on these routes and trucks
having access to bus lanes. He says dedicated freight lanes
on key routes could also be part of the mix.
“Now,
there are only freight and T2 lanes on several of the
motorway on ramps. And at times they get jammed up with
single occupant vehicles.”
Mr Aitken said there
had been suggestions trucks want better access along
Dominion Rd. “That’s not correct. It’s not a major
freight route.”
The main arterial routes in need of
decongestion include Great South Rd, Onewa Road, Ti Rakau
Drive, Puhinui Rd, Saleyards Road, Church St Te Papapa, the
eastern end of Remuera Road to Greenlane Rd East and St
Johns Rd.
“Road freight transport is the life
blood of the city,” said Mr Aitken.
“Every factory,
distribution centre, building site, supermarket and shopping
mall relies on trucks to deliver what they need.”
Decongesting roads does work, even when traffic volumes
increase. Recently Nielsen St in Onehunga had no parking and
clearway zones extended and the bridge at the Onehunga end
was removed.
Traffic is now flowing 15 percent faster
over the 2.2 kms, despite the traffic volume increasing 8.5
percent between August 216 and March 2017.
“Freeing up traffic flow doesn’t just benefit our members, but all traffic using the same road.”
National Road Carriers is the largest nationwide
organisation representing companies involved in the road
transport industry. It has 1700 members, who collectively
operate 15,000 trucks throughout New Zealand.
ends