Divisive Mount Maunganui road trial re-established

Congestion on Links Avenue caused safety issues for children and cyclists. Photo: SunLive.

A controversial road trial in Mount Maunganui has been approved and could start in as little as two weeks.

Tauranga City Council commissioners have approved a minimum four month trial of a cul-de-sac on Links Avenue in an extraordinary council meeting on Monday.

The trial will also see the westbound morning peak bus lane removed and a 30km per hour speed limit put in place.

Links Avenue runs parallel between Maunganui Road and Oceanbeach Road, two main arterial routes in Mount Maunganui. It connects Concord Avenue to Golf Road.

The four month trial comes on the back of a five week trial of the cul-de-sac that started on November 15 2021.

Some residents of the street were vehemently opposed to the original trial and took to protesting when the cul-de-sac was first put in place.

In the initial trial the road was blocked off from Ascot Road preventing anyone living east of the cul-de-sac easy access to Mount Maunganui.

Tauranga City Council director of transport Brendan Bisley says public feedback received during and after the trial was the primary direction residents go is toward Mount Maunganui.

'From a public perspective the trial wasn't hugely popular,” he says.

'I think a lot of people found it inconvenient because it was very difficult, if you live on the Concord Avenue end of the street to get out.”

The new trial will to move the cul-de-sac further down the road toward Concord Avenue.

All directly affected residents will have access to Golf Road however only buses, bicycles and motorbikes will be able enter or exit Links Avenue from Concord Avenue.

The initial trial came about after some of the street's residents raised safety concerns around their children, pedestrians and cyclists accessing schools and commuting in peak traffic when the road is heavily congested.

Mount Maunganui Intermediate's front entrance is on Links Ave and the road is also used by students travelling to Mount Maunganui College and Omanu Primary.

Commissioner Shadrach Rolleston says there was a 'significant problem with this particular part of the network”.

'We couldn't just sit by and allow this continue to, which is why we've acted,” he says.

Traffic data collected from Links Avenue by council before the trial began showed around 7500 vehicle movements per day.

Commission Chair Anne Tolley says: 'This is a residential street which you would normally expect to see two to two and a half thousand vehicles a day”.

'And it's now got seven and a half thousand vehicles a day and that in itself is wrong,” she says.

Tauranga City Council commission chair Anne Tolley. Photo: John Borren/SunLive.

Council trial data showed the cul-de-sac reduced through movements on Links Avenue by around 70 per cent and 'the wider transport network was able to cope”.

Bisley says the purpose of the four month trial is to enable increased safety through removal of the bus lane and to see if people will move to alternate moves of transport.

'The reason we're suggesting that we do this trial for a minimum of four months is that we didn't see, with only a five week trial, any behaviour modification,” he says.

Bisley says people didn't shift to alternate modes of transport like using buses, cycling or adjusting the times they were travelling.

'Four months will allow for people to try different ways of travelling.

'And it gives us a better idea of what would be the permanent impact on the network, if we would have something like this permanently installed.”

He says people's preferred route of travel during the initial trial was to go down Oceanbeach Road which saw an increase 3000 vehicles per day to a weekday average of 17,400.

Travel times were also recorded during the trial using anonymous Bluetooth data at timing points, one on Maunganui Road and another on Oceanbeach Road.

The data shows at travel time via Oceanbeach Road was 2-3 minutes longer in the afternoon and 35 seconds to 1.4 minutes in the morning.

While travel via Maunganui Road was 40 seconds to 3 minutes longer in the afternoon and 25-50 seconds longer in the morning.

Tolley who commutes from Pāpāmoa says her travel time during the trial was 'pretty close” to her typical commute, particularly in the morning.

'I wasn't surprised, but it was much less than we had originally anticipated,” she says.

The cul-de-sac during the first trial. Photo: John Borren/SunLive.

Commissioner Shadrach Rolleston says in terms of the cul-de-sac and the safety issues around the conflicts between school children, cyclists and car users to 'trying to come to the perfect solution is a challenge”.

'Seeing the results [of the trial] it has essentially addressed that safety issue.”

He says there is tension between the community wanting to be safe and the convenience of being able to go places in a timely fashion.

Tolley says the trial is just one piece of work around the city's roading infrastructure and commissioners are not in any position to make a decision about a permanent solution for Links Ave.

The trial is expected to start in late February and continue for at least four months. Council staff will report back to the commissioners in August.

-Local Democracy Reporting is Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air

8 comments

Why

Posted on 15-02-2022 12:04 | By Accountable

Why does Council feel the need to disrupt the every day lives of possibly 30,000 to 40,000 residents, who are all commuters at some stage, in Papamoa for the only reason that somebody MAY get killed. Has there been any deaths on that road to date and if so who was at fault? The way Council is going they will have every road in the city devoid of traffic and there will be traffic jams caused by to many buses trying to go everywhere at the same time. Come on Brendan get real and allow the traffic to flow unimpeded as it has done for many years with very few problems. It is only when Council interferes that major problems suddenly seem to appear. I thought the last Council Transport manager was difficult to work with but your turning out to be more deaf and blind than he was.


Wow

Posted on 15-02-2022 13:01 | By Informed

I'm the first one to say that the council get a bad wrap sometimes, but this is madness. Just move the bus lane over onto SH2 by widening it. However I guess the decision will be made, but I can't see many getting out of their car onto a bus or bike (especially since our bike network is non-existent).


Tolley commute

Posted on 15-02-2022 13:09 | By Kancho

It's interesting that council are looking for people to use different modes of transport and monitoring to see if they do. Well Tolley doesn't change her commute it seems. Probably because it doesn't work and takes to long. Like most bus changes are time consuming and inconvenient for lots of valid reasons. I wonder how many councillors or council staff have changed to different modes of travel ?. Especially if going to the office and return. For many of the public who need vehicles for work for kids to school shopping , errands etc different ways just aren't practical . Would be interesting to know council staff whether it's do as we say not as we do.


What a disgrace.

Posted on 15-02-2022 16:16 | By TheCameltoeKid

All the figures that Tolley and Bisley are throwing about are total rubbish. These figures are nothing but hogwash and totally irrelevant! This trial should not have taken place until Baylink is completed if ever. All it has achieved is putting more pressure on already heavily congested Maunganui and Oceanbeach like Boris Jojnson could figure that one out. The sooner that these Commisioners are gone the better offthis City and the Western Bay will be.


Bikes?

Posted on 15-02-2022 17:02 | By jed

Bizley wants people on their bikes. Clearly.


Commissioner's commute

Posted on 15-02-2022 18:37 | By Centurion

Perhaps Commissioner Tolley would enlighten us as to how she commutes. Cycle? Bus? Is her travel monitored? Seems a slight case of 'you do what I want, and I'll do what I want'.


Bikes

Posted on 15-02-2022 19:38 | By Informed

Yes this is a dumb move, and Yes the council wants people in buses and bikes, just like every large city in the whole world. No city can afford to build enough roads. But to to be fair to the council, they have the highest percentage of staff in Tauranga that bike. I was their for a meeting one day with the H&S Team and their would have been 300+ bikes. That’s 300 cars off the road.


@ Kancho

Posted on 15-02-2022 21:21 | By Yadick

You raise a great question. It would be nice to know how many from TCC have changed their mode of transport. I really can't imagine the Commissioners taking a bus to and from work and of course pushbikes for their daily commutes with a Latte" in one hand, trouser clips, paperwork in a basket on the front and work bag on the carrier at the back.


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