Councillor: Mount road project top priority

The Connecting Mount Maunganui project aims to reduce congestion on Hewletts Road. Photo / File.

“Critical” plans to reduce congestion at a major bottleneck in Mount Maunganui are underway, but one councillor is pushing for it to be higher priority.

Motorists will have a more efficient and reliable journey through Hewletts Road (SH2), Tōtara Street and Maunganui Road once the Connecting Mount Maunganui project is complete.

The roads link Mount Maunganui to Tauranga and are the main routes to New Zealand’s largest port.

It will be delivered in stages and include road and safety improvements, new connections between roads, the eventual four-laning of Totara St and the creation of a flyover from Totara St to the harbour bridge side of Hewletts Rd.

The first stage, at a cost of $5 million, will introduce high occupancy lanes on Hewletts Rd, allowing vehicles with three passengers or more to use the bus lanes.

Te Maire Street will also be connected to Newton Street which would reduce traffic on Hewletts Rd.

Councillor Glen Crowther said the project is the number one priority in Tauranga’s Transport System Plan (TSP) but there’s limited funding for it in the city’s 10-year plan.

Public transport improvements were number two, he said.

“To say it’s a critical project is if anything under egging, it’s our number one transport project.”


Councillor Glen Crowther said the project not being prioritised in the next 10 years made no sense at all. Photo / Alisha Evans.

The TSP is a 30-year plan made up of more than 80 transport projects for the Western Bay of Plenty region.

There was nothing more important than the Connecting Mount Maunganui project, but it wasn’t included in the council’s long-term plan, said Crowther.

“This project has been nixed from the plan [which] makes no sense at all.”

He wanted a long-term plan amendment which included the Connecting Mount Maunganui project.

“If we don’t go down that track, we are backing ourselves into a corner.”

All of the stages are subject to funding from the NZ Transport Agency, with a delivery date only set for stage one.

The council has allocated $29m in the 2024-34 long-term plan and $263m between 2035-44 to support the project.

Crowther also said that not grade separating the railway line, by setting it a different height from the road, was incredibly short-sighted. It had been part of the original plans.

Rail connections to the Port of Tauranga needed to be future proofed because the planned freight increases were “gobsmacking,” he said.


An 11-year-old girl died after being struck by a train on the Hewletts Rd rail crossing in July 2023. Photo / Alex Cairns

Last year, an 11-year-old girl died at the Maunganui Rd / Hewletts Rd rail crossing after she was struck by a train when biking home from school.

NZTA regional manager system design Jess Andrews said they looked at the key users of the road and did a lot of consultation to create the plans.

“Mount Maunganui and Hewletts Rd has the privilege of trying to serve everyone in a very small area which makes it incredibly complex from a transport planning perspective.”

Connecting some of the dead-end local roads would have an enormous difference on transport movements, she said.

Infrastructure general manager Nic Johansson said the planned projects in the TSP wouldn’t solve all of Tauranga’s transport problems.

“Transport planners keep telling us that we’re not going to build our way out of congestion.”

People also needed to change their behaviour to use other transport other than cars, he said.


A graphic of the preferred option for the Connecting Mount Maunganui project. Image / NZTA.

What’s planned

Stage one: occupancy lanes on Hewletts Rd and a connection from Te Maire Street to Newton Street at a cost of $5m.

Stage two and three: more local roads connected and bus stop upgrades at a cost of $118m.

Stage four: costed at $23m, would include a new shared path on Maunganui Road, and one between Tōtara St and Maunganui Rd including an overpass between Maunganui Road.

Stage five: add additional lanes to Totara Street and a flyover at the Tōtara Street, Hewletts Road intersection, costing $146m.

Tauranga City Council would pay 49 per cent of the local road projects while the state highway projects, including the flyover, would be fully funded by NZTA.

By the end of the year, the council will be presented with a business case for approval, which would then go to NZ Transport Agency for approval.

If funding is approved the council would progress the high occupancy lanes on Hewletts Road in 2025.

LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

10 comments

Not Even

Posted on 12-09-2024 07:25 | By Cynical Me

This is by no means the worst jam. Barkes Cnr outrates it 10 to one.
These people need to spend a few weeks driving around.
15th Ave is going to be a pain for the next 2 years and Turret Rd is even worse than Totara st.

Totara St can be easily fixed. Ban all log storage, have that out by a rail line out of town, and rail the logs straight to the ship side for loading. Get rid of the log trucks and use trains. Just in time logistics.
Let Auckland load more containers so we are not railing them there. Make better use of the rail.
That can also be done with containers. It's done overseas like that. Indeed lots are loaded from barges. Potential there.
Our harbour has become what Auckland wanted to get rid of.
Tank storage for oils and chemicals.


Finally someone talking

Posted on 12-09-2024 07:37 | By Naysay

We can not continue with major events and traffic in and out of the mount . Coupled with the ever expanding port activities and now they want to expand operations using Fast Track. In the interim while you are talking about an issue that residents talk about everyday . Limited the time trucks can use this roading so kids can get to school . Used extensively overseas so it's proven to work .


Totara St

Posted on 12-09-2024 11:04 | By The Truth Is Out There

So. 1 question. If Totara st is going to be 4 lanes. Does that mean the millions spent. Putting in the cycle/walkway along Totara St. Was thrown away?
As they are going to need that space to create 4 lanes.


Crossing highlighted?

Posted on 12-09-2024 11:19 | By ConcernedCit

For a period of at least two months, this hastily put in safety barrier (after the terrible incident on the crossing pictured in your story) -lay bent and damaged, at times laying on the road edge. Even rail worksmen didn't think to correct the panel when at the location doing other work. The original signage is dirty and old and with the chain link fence up is actually now not visibly clear to those approaching,or to make an easy escape if caught out on the tracks as a pedestrian.
Many times after crossing here, the bells have started and the short distance driving to the roundabout a train has roared by...stop highlighting roading Council. Give back the contracts to look after our areas to those who will deal with matters as soon as they arise


Oh dear

Posted on 12-09-2024 12:26 | By peanuts9

I agree with Cynical Me. That is by no means the only area where traffic jams are continuous.
It's up there but so are so many others roads in this city.
Why should this one be top priority?


Remove the bus lanes

Posted on 12-09-2024 15:25 | By Paul W2

Remove the useless bus lanes along Hewletts Road. They never seem to have any busses in them and I'm sure that the traffic flow along there would be improved.


Shambles

Posted on 12-09-2024 20:04 | By anotherone2

A little over a month and we already have Councillors who think they know better then the experts. Infrastructure should not be a political football.


congestion

Posted on 12-09-2024 21:14 | By Gutty

It all sounds good but what about the money already spent on Manganui Road and Totara St? Its already a traffic block. What's going to happen over Christmas when the holiday traffic arrives? I agree that all logging trucks should off load out of Tauranga and the logs trained to the wharf as this would reduce traffic volume. Eastern Link to Omokaroa and Eastern link to Ruahihi should be 4 laned.


Paul W2

Posted on 13-09-2024 09:22 | By Yadick

Paul W2's comment solves 95% of the issue.
Great comment. All for it.


Were is the bigger picture

Posted on 13-09-2024 12:08 | By Wigan

It's all very well "tinkering" with the lanes... adding/removing bus lanes. The thing is, if you pour water into a funnel from a container it will always come out the bottom a certain rate. If you pour water into the same funnel from 2 or 3 or more containers, it will still come out at the same rate.
So, in other words, no matter what you do between point A & point B you will fix NOTHING if you don't address what's going on, the other side of point A & point B.
It would be brilliant if someone came up with a plan that stretches further than the middle of next week! Then all we need to do is hunt down someone with the courage to implement it.


Leave a Comment


You must be logged in to make a comment.