Skip to main content

Auckland’s causeway project

When it is finished in early 2017, the causeway on Auckland’s North-western Motorway, State Highway 16, will have been raised 1.5m to stop flooding at extreme high tides. There will be four lanes city-bound and four/five lanes westbound with dedicated bus lanes in each direction, and the existing North-western cycleway that runs alongside it will be upgraded.
April 4, 2014 Read time: 3 mins
Part of the 4.8km Causeway Upgrade Project on Auckland's North-western motorway which runs through a marine reserve, looking east towards the city - Photography by Greg Kempthorne
When it is finished in early 2017, the causeway on Auckland’s North-western Motorway, State Highway 16, will have been raised 1.5m to stop flooding at extreme high tides. There will be four lanes city-bound and four/five lanes westbound with dedicated bus lanes in each direction, and the existing North-western cycleway that runs alongside it will be upgraded.

More than 10,000 wick drains have already been installed to accelerate consolidation of up to 15m of alluvial marine mud as part of the NZ Transport Agency’s 4.8km, US$183.3 million (NZ$220 million) Causeway Upgrade Project. “Intensive ground reclamation like this is an important part of the project’s work to upgrade and improve this section of the motorway. We are mindful to protect the marine reserve environment where we are working, installing new bird roosts for species which inhabit the area, and silt fences,” said the Transport Agency’s highways manager, Tommy Parker. 

A 2-3M-deep drainage blanket using more than 26,000 truckloads of 19-25mm recycled aggregate has been spread on top of the wick drains. When the settlement has stabilised, construction of new motorway lanes will start on top of it.

The Causeway Alliance – the NZ Transport Agency, AECOM, Coffey, Fulton Hogan, Leighton Contractors and Sinclair Knight Merz – is completing the upgrade.
 
The project is one of five underway or planned to finish the 47km-long Western Ring Route along the South-western, North-western and Upper Harbour motorways, which is identified by the Government as one of its Roads of National Significance to support New Zealand’s economic growth.

The project is the first in New Zealand to adopt temporary orange marking tape to improve lane definition and enhance driver safety. Maintaining traffic flow of almost 100,000 vehicles/day while upgrading this section of the state highway network is a key challenge and driver cooperation is essential.

Mr Parker said that for the first time, Auckland will have direct motorway access between the central business district and the airport, and the Western Ring Route will also better connect people and freight with the city’s rapidly growing areas in the north-west and south-west. 

 “It’s a key part of a massive investment in infrastructure needed to meet the demands of rapid economic and population growth underway in the top half of the North Island,” he said. 

More detailed information on this project will be included in a feature in the April issue of World Highways.

Related Content

  • Financing sought for Australia tunnel project
    December 13, 2018
    Financing is being sought in Australia for the a major tunnel project in New South Wales. The project is for the Western Harbour Tunnel, which is intended to run underneath Sydney Harbour. The route for the proposed tunnel would rund from the Rozelle interchange to the Warringah Freeway. The tunnel project forms part of a wider plan to build new road links in Sydney, in a bid to help reduce the city’s traffic problem. The new tunnel would lower journey times for drivers by cutting congestion on the famous S
  • Partnership for Australian link
    February 29, 2012
    Work will commence shortly on a major project to improve the Great Eastern Highway in Western Australia (WA).
  • Norway moves toward more E39 coastal road improvements
    April 4, 2019
    Norway is working on plans to make more of the major north-south E39 coastal route a ferry-free highway, coasting €35.3 billion, according to media. In Norway, the trans-European route 39 is part national road system and is developed and maintained by the public roads administration. It runs for 1,330km along the coast from Klett just south of Trondheim to Nørresundby. Norway’s E39 is mostly a two-lane undivided road with only relatively short sections near Stavanger, Trondheim and Bergen being motorw
  • UK council plans €64 million highways upgrade
    August 17, 2012
    UK-based Milton Keynes Council is to borrow €64 million (£50 million) for a new road repair programme to tackle the city’s “decaying" roads and pavements. The 1960’s new town, which is located about an hour’s drive north of London, has approved a plan which includes more than €27 million (£21 million) for vital road repair work, €18 million (£14 million) to tackle its ageing bridges and more than €9 million (£7 million) to restore the council’s pavement and footpath network.