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Six-year wait for gorge route

ELISA VORSTER

[email protected]

The Manawatu Gorge replacement has finally been confirmed, providing relief and certainty for a region in wait, but it will be a long six years before businesses most affected will reap the benefits.

The chosen route will reconnect the Manawatu, Tararua District, Hawke’s Bay and northern Wairarapa regions, with the new road expected to be completed by 2024.

The route runs from near the Te Apiti carpark at the western entry of the closed Manawatu Gorge, across the Ruahine Range north of the gorge, before emerging at Woodville.

People travelling between Masterton and Palmerston North have been using the Saddle Rd since the gorge closed in April last year, giving commuters the option to bypass Woodville completely.

Manager of Yummy Mummy’s Cheesecakes in Woodville, Sera Williams, called the wait “disappointing”.

“We have definitely noticed a huge difference in the amount of people coming through.

“Six years is a long time for a community which relies on people coming through it.”

New Zealand Transport Agency (NZTA) director of regional relationships Emma Speight said the Option 3 route emerged as the safest and most resilient route which best balanced the needs of the communities, businesses and road users.

“Everybody understands just how important a replacement for the gorge is.

“It will re-establish a key strategic transport and freight link that supports the needs of the people and economies of central New Zealand,” Ms Speight says.

NZTA had also committed to investigating a regional freight ring road which would include a second road bridge across the Manawatu River, which they say would help unlock regional economic development opportunities.

Tararua Mayor Tracey Collis said she was really pleased with the decision and said the announcement provided certainty for the region.

She said the inclusion of a freight ring road was a “win-win” scenario.

“Now we can really get ourselves ready for the economic benefits that will come out of it.”

Wairarapa MP Alastair Scott said the decision to go ahead with Option 3 was a good one, but a six-year wait would “continue to frustrate” the region.

“There’s going to be opportunities lost because of the disconnection between east and west.

“If that road was built tomorrow for example, you would see the likes of Woodville and Dannevirke essentially be part of a suburb of Palmerston North – there would be a lot better connectivity.

“It does seem like a bloody long time – and it’s always longer than they expect.”

Labour list MP Kieran McAnulty disagreed, saying cutting a road through a mountain range was not something that could be done quickly.

People were informed and satisfied with the time frames from the beginning.

He said the government had previously said it would “pull every lever possible” to speed this up as much as it could, and he would be continuing to have conversations to see how he could make this happen quickly.

Mrs Collis’s solution for Woodville was simple.

“We will be strong together, and get through together.”

 

3 COMMENTS

  1. Wake up Wairarapa . Six wait ! and the rest . We used to have a rail service to the Manawatu and north . that was taken away . The gorge has been closed to be replaced by two narrow ,winding, hilly roads . The cost in time and money using these over six years will be enormous . Recently a road in Northland was blocked by a massive slip , are they waiting six tears . No ! dynamite is being used to clear it . Common Wairarapa MP’s earn your keep , excuses are not good enough

  2. McNulty is wrong and if he thinks he isn’t, I suggest he visits Switzerland, Germany, Austria etc to find out just how fast roads can be built through mountains.
    NZ road builders are lazy and workshy – they do not work late in summer, do not work 24/7 using floodlights and shift work etc etc.
    Look at how long the small job on the Rimutaka Hill Road took. I used to pass by there in the summer, when there were at least 4 more hours of daylight, and the lazy contractors were all home or in the pub.
    The quality of their work is usually so poor that they are back within 6 months to repair it!

  3. I do not understand the fourth paragraph re, Masterton commuters using the saddle road having the option to bypass Woodville. For Masterton commuters travelling through Woodville nothing has changed, they still go through or bypass the town.??? Most I thought would avoid that route for the shorter Pahiatua track. Yummy Mummy,s now has a new cafe almost nxt door, could be the reason for less trade at Yummy Mummy,s?????

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