Huntly highway open

Photo of Huntly expressway

 

The $384 million Huntly section of the Waikato Expressway is open.

Contractors removed cones and barriers from the country’s newest road just before noon yesterday (Monday 9 March) and traffic switched from the old State Highway 1 route via Huntly.

The 15km four-lane highway takes State Highway 1 east of Huntly town, across lowlands and streams and over Taupiri Range.

Waka Kotahi Waikato Portfolio Manager Darryl Coalter said the Transport Agency is thrilled to see traffic flowing on the new highway, and thanked motorists for their patience while the finishing touches were applied to the new road.

“This project has been complex and challenging, but also hugely rewarding for all involved. It’s fantastic to have traffic using the road and we hope everyone will enjoy driving on it as much as we enjoyed building it.”

The Huntly section connects the completed expressway sections at Ohinewai in the north and the Ngaruawahia section at Gordonton Road in the south. It will bring improvements in safety and efficiency, taking traffic away from the congestion point through Huntly, which has a poor safety record.

“The new road will provide people travelling through the Waikato on State Highway 1 with a safer, more reliable and enjoyable journey,” Mr Coalter said.

Mr Coalter pointed to the support of iwi as critical to the success of the project.

“Without a strong relationship with Waikato-Tainui we could not have got this road built in such a culturally significant area. We’ve set out to recognise this cultural significance through pou and other artwork along the route, and the restoration of two former paa sites.”

Yesterday’s opening was preceded by two days of stakeholder and public events last month, with an iwi-led site blessing followed by a ribbon-cutting and lunch at Te Iringa Lagoon on 14 February, and a chance for the public to walk, run, cycle and bus along the new road the following day. This included the Expressway Classic half-marathon.

The Huntly section is part of the 102km four-laning of SH1 from Bombay to south of Cambridge, which will be completed when the 22km Hamilton section opens in late 2021. Once completed, the Waikato Expressway is expected to reduce travel times by 35 minutes between the Bombay Hills and south of Cambridge.

 

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Number 8 Network - a community website for the rural areas northeast of Hamilton, NZ, is run by Gordonton journalist/editor Annette Taylor.

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