Council bans heavy vehicles from Maunganui Road

The traffic lights on Maunganui Road. Photo: Tauranga City Council.

As construction on the final portion of the Maunganui Road upgrade gets underway, Tauranga City Council is announcing a heavy vehicle ban for a section of the road.

In a statement released this week, council says a bylaw has been passed that bans heavy vehicles on Maunganui Road between Golf Road and Hull Road.

This means vehicles more than 3.5 tonnes are no longer allowed on this stretch of road at any time with exception of road maintenance and refuse collection vehicles, buses, emergency services, and legitimate use (like deliveries to New World or Z service station).

As well as improving safety, the bylaw change will help lessen wear and tear on this new section of road, says the council statement.

This will present a change of routine for some heavy vehicle drivers who should instead use Hewletts Road, Newton Street, Totara Street, and Hull Road as alternatives.

In the same statement, council says construction is underway on the final portion of the Maunganui Road upgrade with works continuing to improve intersections, access to public transport, and safety for all road users between Central Parade and Tui Street.

The planned works follow the successful activation of traffic signals at the Tweed Street intersection, and new signalised pedestrian crossings and a shared path to safely access the Destination Skatepark.

Council’s Service Transformation Lead James Jacobs says the final portion of works will build on these improvements to create a safer environment for everyone who travels in and around the area. 

“We have this amazing recently completed world class skatepark in our backyard and it’s already proving very popular with people of all ages and backgrounds.

“Now we’re extending the new shared path to a new crossing near Dee Street, making it safer and easier to get to the skatepark, to utilise public transport, and to move around Mount Maunganui by bike, on foot, or on your skateboard.”

Other elements of the last portion of this once in a generation upgrade include better bus stops and shelters, a new roundabout to improve access to and from Kupe Avenue, and the closure of the Heath Street intersection.

Central Parade businesses and car parks remain open during construction and Heath Street is still accessible via the Central Parade carpark entrance or the adjacent side roads.

The road designs were shared at community open days, and workshops with businesses, Mount Maunganui College, and the Returned Services Association, and the feedback has been largely supportive of the upgrades, providing some valuable local insight.

“People were aware of the safety issues along this stretch of Maunganui Road and were keen to see the area made safer for everyone, no matter how they are moving,” says James.

“Thanks for your patience and consideration while we get this work done. Please continue to support Central Parade businesses and be kind to the construction team, who are just doing their job.”

Construction will continue for about five months and the project is due for completion in the final quarter of 2024.

James says council will continue to keep the community and businesses updated throughout the construction process and share any temporary traffic management changes as early as they can.

For more on the Maunganui Road safety improvements visit https://letstalk.tauranga.govt.nz/projects/maunganui-road-safety-improvements.

4 comments

Tauranga council are wrong!

Posted on 21-06-2024 08:21 | By jed

Having just visited Australia.. what a pleasant place to drive. They value efficiency of moving vehicles from point A to point B.

The opposite is true in Tauranga, they want to slow traffic as much as possible. Maunganui is now often jammed with traffic thanks to council.

I see they're blocking more right hand turns too.

I was not aware of any safety issues along that stretch of road... when was the last injury that was atttributed to poor road design?


Council is out of control

Posted on 21-06-2024 10:06 | By an_alias

We have congestion created by council with endless bottle necks.
We need some actual elected people to push back on the agenda to destroy motoring or we all end up leaving


The Master

Posted on 21-06-2024 12:31 | By Ian Stevenson

TCC got it wrong again....

Banning heavy traffic on one road simply means that another road will wear out faster, obviously that was a little to much for TCC to be able to think of it in this lifetime...!!!!

Looks like the usual "publicity stunt" has been released on it, "... for your safety...". They don't seem to realise that the biggest hazard to the communities safety , well-being and betterment is in fact TCC.


Idiots

Posted on 21-06-2024 14:47 | By First Responder

So it's fine for a 13 ton bus to travel along there, but my 4.0 ton motor home is banned. What a bunch of clowns. Hey, here's an idea. Why don't you try and get traffic flowing better, rather than stuffing everything up. Time some of these twits making these ideas retired, or moved into a geriatric hospital


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