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Second Harbour Crossing, Auckland

The Second Harbour Crossing is the name given to the proposed second transport link across the Waitematā Harbour in Auckland, New Zealand. Planners have also referred to new links across the harbour as the Additional Waitematā Harbour Crossing (AWHC) or the Waitematā Harbour Connections.[1][2]

Satellite view of Auckland, with Waitematā Harbour separating the North Shore from the rest of the city. The existing Auckland Harbour Bridge is near the centre of the image.

Roughly a third of New Zealand's population live in the Auckland region, and the harbour bisects the city between its CBD and the North Shore. The current Auckland Harbour Bridge, built in 1959, was widened significantly in 1969 but has long been at capacity during peak hours. Carrying both national north–south and local traffic, it is a significant choke point in New Zealand's road network. The alternative motorway route around the edge of the harbour is also near peak capacity despite widening programs, and is easily gridlocked if the bridge is closed due to an accident or adverse weather conditions. The current crossing's limitations are a major contributor to Auckland's wider traffic congestion issues and their accompanying economic impacts.

New crossings have been proposed repeatedly over the previous decades. Most recently, in 2023 the Labour government of Chris Hipkins announced plans for a new crossing—involving two new road tunnels and a single light rail tunnel—to begin construction in 2029. However, with Labour's loss in the 2023 General Election these proposals are under review by the new National-led government of Prime Minister Christopher Luxon.

Background edit

 
"Bridging the Waitemata - a dream of the very distant future" (1911 illustration, unbuilt)

Proposals for a crossing over Waitematā Harbour first arose only a few decades after Auckland was founded by the British in 1840. In 1860, John Bell designed a drawbridge on floating pontoons that would have given cattle and pig farmers in the rural North Shore a more direct route for driving their livestock into the city. While the plan included tolls to pay for its construction, its estimated cost (£16,000) was considered too high.[3] Further bridges were proposed in 1927 and 1929, while the earliest tunnel proposal—floated during discussions about extending the city's rail network—dates to 1920.[4]

A Royal Commission in 1946 recommended a four-lane road bridge, but further modelling predicted that there would be a population boom in the North Shore after being connected to the CBD, necessitating at least six lanes for future-proofing. The Auckland Harbour Authority was established in 1951 to lobby for funding, seek tenders from architects and construction firms, and further develop the plans, which had now settled on a compromise five-lane bridge with two additional walking and cycling lanes. However, the National government, led by Prime Minister Sidney Holland, insisted that the total budget could not exceed $5 million. This led to a so-called "austerity" design of a four-lane bridge without pedestrian/cycling lanes at all.[3] Construction began on the Auckland Harbour Bridge in 1954, and it opened in 1959, with toll booths in place until 1984.

Traffic was immediately higher than expected from its first day of opening. By 1969 it had become obvious that the bridge was too narrow and two additional lanes—known locally as the "Nippon clip-ons"[5]—were added on each side, creating an eight-lane bridge. At the time, it was predicted that the increased capacity would last only until about 1985.[6] Even with the clip-on sections and new traffic management in place, the Harbour Bridge was soon experiencing congestion during rush hours again. Proposals for a second bridge soon started to be discussed, such as one connecting from Meola Reef to Birkenhead, though the idea was abandoned in the 1970s after public outcry.[4]

Studies into traffic patterns across the Auckland region consistently predicted that congestion would continue to get worse as the North Shore grew further and Auckland City became more densely settled, and pressure for another harbour crossing has grown in tandem with the city's growth in population. New Zealand also experiences regular earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, and having only one crossing, which could be disabled during a natural disaster, has been identified as an issue of national concern.[7] However, the substantial cost of any new crossing, as well as the disruption to communities on both sides of the harbour during construction—the North Shore is now a densely-populated urban district, unlike when the original bridge was built—has repeatedly dissuaded governments from investing in any specific plan.

Instead, planners have tended to focus on shorter-term solutions which mitigate the urgency for a new crossing. For example, Auckland Council's 2011 ten-year transit plan review explicitly argued that transit proposals which avoid the need for a second harbour crossing altogether, or at the very least delay its necessity, should be prioritised.[8] The most notable of these projects, the Western Ring Route—a combination of upgraded and new motorway sections skirting the western edge of the harbour and suburbs, to provide relief for traffic travelling between the North Shore and West Auckland—was completed in July 2017 with the opening of the Waterview Connection.[9]

Opponents of any new crossing have also pointed to multiple traffic surveys which have found that the number of car trips across the existing bridge during peak times has remained relatively stable since the 1990s, as the feeder junctions and roads at either end of the bridge are also at capacity.[10] New journeys have instead been made possible with investment in better public transport, and specifically bus routes—since the construction of the hugely successful Northern Busway, 50% of peak time passengers across the bridge are now carried by bus.[11]

However, there are few further options for continuing to increase cross-harbour capacity without an entirely new bridge or tunnel. In 2017, Auckland Transport's projections indicated that the Northern Busway would reach maximum capacity in 2026, twenty years earlier than originally expected, and there would soon be overcrowding at Albany, Sunnynook and Akoranga stations. The only option for increasing capacity further on the route is for it to be converted into a light rail line, but with the existing bridge at its weight limit this will be impossible until a second crossing is built to carry the line across to the CBD.[12] The number of trucks making north–south journeys across the bridge is also predicted to more than double by mid-century, further emphasising the impact of congestion on the bridge to New Zealand's wider economy.[13]

The failure to provide pedestrian or cycle lanes on the original bridge has also meant that there is no foot route across the harbour. While Auckland Transport has long provided a number of ferry routes for passengers travelling from areas of the North Shore to the central Downtown Ferry Terminal near Waitematā Station in the CBD, the inconvenience of the ferries in terms of both time and expense has long been seen as dissuading many Aucklanders from switching to active modes of travel, which would further help ease road congestion. Auckland Transport's Transport Emissions Reduction Pathway, published in August 2022, reaffirmed that a new fixed crossing with pedestrian and cycling lanes is seen as an essential part of its longer-term plans.[14][15]

Modern proposals edit

1996 report edit

Following a detailed scoping study undertaken in 1996, Transit New Zealand identified its preferred options for a new crossing – either a new bridge approximately 500m west of the bridge connecting to the North-Western Motorway (SH16) via a tunnel underneath Ponsonby and Grey Lynn, or a tunnel slightly to the east of the bridge connecting to the Central Motorway Junction via twin cut-and-cover tunnels under the western CBD / Victoria Park.[16] A follow-up study in 2003 found that these proposals, if both built together, would cost the equivalent of $4.5 billion in 2022 dollars.[17]

2006-2009 alignment studies edit

 
A map of NZTA's preferred route ("Option 2C") for two new harbour crossings, published in 2008

In 2006, Transit New Zealand consulted on a new 10-year plan, and included funding for another study into a second harbour road crossing.[18] This included the possibility of landing a future tunnel underneath the Western Reclamation (now known as the Wynyard Quarter), with a connecting tunnel to south of Victoria Park. Costs were estimated at NZ$3 billion.[19] A possible tunnel between Mechanics Bay and Northcote was also considered in the feasibility studies, but faced increasing criticism from local groups, and was seen as problematic due to the denser residential zones and geographic difficulties faced on such an alignment.[20]

In December 2007, Transit New Zealand noted that more than 160 options had been narrowed down, and the final option—known as "option 2C"—was published in early 2008. It consisted of two new crossings, made of two tunnels each. The first possible alignment (approximately 4.5 km) would be a parallel link several hundred meters directly to the east of the existing bridge, while the second alignment (approximately 6.5 km) would start in the same general environs in the North Shore, but travel diagonally southeastwards to link up with the motorway at Grafton Gully, east of the Auckland CBD. The second option, due to the need to cross shipping lanes, would need to be a tunnel. It would also have possibly connected to the CBD via a side branch tunnel, for use by public transport only.[21]

There were a number of reactions from local community and lobbying groups to the consultation. North Shore City noted that it preferred a tunnel option for aesthetic reasons, and for the option to convert it to light rail at a future stage.[22] Commentators like Brian Rudman noted that it would make the most sense to keep the new crossing for public transport only, possibly to connect with a rail tunnel to Britomart Transport Centre (now known as Waitematā Station).[23] This statement was largely supported by North Shore mayor George Wood, who noted that public transport provision on any new crossing (including the possibility for light rail or heavy rail to connect to Waitematā Station) had been part of North Shore Council's plans for many years.[24]

In mid-2008, the Waitematā Harbour Crossing study group—a private lobbying group representing local companies—released their recommended option, which would have connected from the existing Esmonde and Onewa motorway interchanges on the North Shore side to Auckland CBD, reaching land in the southwestern part of the Wynyard Quarter (though the links would have continued as tunnels for some further distance, likely going under Victoria Park). The option, selected from several hundred considered alignments, involved four separate tunnels, two for motor vehicles and two for public transport, the demolition of Victoria Park Viaduct, and a new rail station in the Wynyard Quarter. The total costs were estimated at between NZ$3.7 to NZ$4.1 billion, and their study predicted that it would increase the number of journeys across the harbour by 80% by 2041, with 30% by public transport.[25]

In mid-2009, Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency (NZTA)—the successor to Transit New Zealand—safeguarded the route so that further redevelopment on the Wynyard Quarter would not negatively affect the future tunnel.[4] On 2 December 2009, NZTA announced that designations would be protected for the four-tunnel option, though funding to build them was not allocated in upcoming budgets, and no future date for construction was announced.[26][27]

2007 "Anzac Centenary Bridge" alternative edit

During the public discussions in 2007, a group of local politicians and architects put forward a proposal to build a new, much larger bridge to the east of the existing bridge, and then demolish the latter. The new cantilever spar cable-stayed bridge, designed by the Jasmax architectural firm, would be built in time for the 100-year memorial of the Gallipoli landings in 1915.[28]

The new bridge would be roughly 50% longer than the existing one and triple the capacity by including corridors for light rail, cyclists, and pedestrians as well as cars and buses. The designers argued that the new bridge would pay for itself by freeing up 35 hectares of land (and 3.3 km of shoreline) for redevelopment in some of the most sought-after Auckland locations, like Saint Mary's Bay, which were currently taken up by large motorway approaches. The proposed bridge would also be cheaper to operate, and unlike a tunnel, would not need emission vents.[28][29]

In October 2009, the bridge option again surfaced with a group of backers suggesting that a bridge would be a better option from both urban design and transport planning perspectives.[30] However, critics argued that the extra investment required to meet the tight 2015 deadline would necessitate taking funds away from other crucial transport initiatives in the region.[31] The then-mayor of North Shore, Andrew Williams, and the then-chairman of the Auckland Regional Council, Mike Lee, both supported the earlier studies into a tunnel. The then-mayor of Auckland City, John Banks, also favoured the tunnel option, though he did not outright oppose the bridge idea, though the then-mayor of Manukau City, Len Brown, considered the bridge proposal worthy of consideration.[32]

A more detailed concept for the bridge, published in late 2009, included eight traffic lanes (including separate truck and bus lanes) and two light rail tracks on a bridge deck alongside walking and cycling paths, possibly with travelators. Its designers claimed that the estimated NZ$2–3 billion cost of the bridge would be significantly cheaper than existing tunnel plans, estimated at NZ$4 billion.[33]

In December 2009 NZTA announced that, though designations would be sought for new tunnel options, a future bridge was not being precluded so as to protect against conflict with future development in the Wynyard Quarter.[26] The lobby group for the bridge regarded this as a success, though their original timeframe had been substantially pushed back with construction not planned to start until 2015.[34][35] The centenary bridge planning group disbanded soon after, and there is now no organisation pursuing the bridge.

2010 study edit

In March 2010, tendering for another second crossing study was announced by Minister of Transport Steven Joyce. The decision was criticised in an editorial in The New Zealand Herald for wasting time and money, since the previous study only a few years earlier had already, at cost of over $1 million, conclusively ruled in favour of new tunnels over any new bridges.[36]

The eventual report made a business case for three new harbour crossings—a bridge, a road tunnel, and a heavy rain tunnel—for a total estimated cost of $6 billion. The new bridge would have included tolled bike lanes.[37]

2011 "Skypath" edit

To save waiting for an entirely new crossing, in 2011 NZTA proposed focusing on only part of the 2010 recommendations and adding new pedestrian and cycling paths onto the existing bridge. The plan initially had strong local support and was added to Auckland Transport's strategic priority list soon after, with resource consent sought and granted in 2016. The new Labour-led government elected in 2017 also pledged to fund the crossing.[38]

However, concerns over the complexity of adding extra weight to the existing support columns led to the plan being revised in 2019, with Skypath instead proposed to run beneath the existing bridge on its own entirely independent set of columns. The plan was eventually cancelled altogether in 2021 after construction costs had grown to an estimated $785m, by which point planners argued that it would be more efficient to simply build an entirely new crossing altogether as originally planned.[39][40] Local activists have continued to campaign for one of the existing bridge's lanes to be "liberated" for cycling, arguing that it would still provide a net increase to the bridge's capacity by encouraging commuters to switch away from cars. However, NZTA has repeatedly rejected requests for a trial lane after coming to the conclusion that collision risks to pedestrians and cyclists from passing traffic could not be mitigated.[41][14]

2023 Waitematā Harbour Connections proposals edit

In 2019, NZTA commissioned consultancy firm PwC to examine the business cases for and against a wide range of second crossing options, taking into account historical proposals and current economic and demographic trends. The authors noted that 170,000 vehicles were crossing the bridge each day, including 11,000 trucks and more than 1,000 buses. While car passengers during peak hours (7-9am on weekdays) had remained largely static over the previous 25 years due to feeder roads on either side of the bridge having reached capacity, the number of bus and truck journeys continues to grow, with 26,000 truck crossings predicted by 2046. The authors argued that previous road-plus-rail proposals would be less efficient than new heavy rail tunnels for cargo and passenger services.[13]

In March 2023 Transport Minister Michael Wood announced that the government was launching a public consultation on five options for new "Waitematā Harbour Connections", informed by the findings of the 2019 review.[42][43][44] The options vary in scale and cost, with a mixture of tunnels, bridges, and different modes of transport, though all will integrate with plans that are simultaneously underway for a new Auckland Light Rail route between Auckland Airport and the CBD, which will have a station in the Wynyard Quarter:[45]

  • Option 1: Two new tunnels. A light rail line from Wynyard Quarter to Smales Farm via Belmont and Takapuna, and a road tunnel forming a new section of Highway 1 from Saint Mary's Bay to Akoranga Drive. The existing bridge would be reconfigured with more bus lanes and new pedestrian/cycle lanes. Total cost estimated at $25 billion (the most expensive of the options), with a 15-year construction timetable.
  • Option 2: One new bridge, adjacent to the existing one with a mixture of car, bus, and pedestrian/cycle lanes, as well as a light rail line connecting the Wynyard Quarter to Takapuna via Akoranga Station. Total cost estimated at $15 billion, with a 10-year construction timetable. Noted in the government's announcement as the cheapest option, but also the least-resilient.
  • Option 3: One new bridge, one new tunnel. A new light rail line running through the tunnel from the Wynyard Quarter to Takapuna via Birkenhead, Northcote, and Akoranga stations. The new bridge would combine car and pedestrian/cycle lanes to connect Westhaven to Northcote Point for vehicles travelling through Auckland, while local traffic would be concentrated on the existing bridge. 10-year construction timetable, but noted in the government's announcement as the least-efficient option in terms of increasing total cross-harbour capacity.
  • Option 4: One new bridge, one new tunnel. A new bridge east of the existing one, connecting St Mary's Bay at its southern end to Sulphur Beach at the north, to carry pedestrian/cycle lanes as well as a new light rail line. The rail line would connect the Wynyard Quarter with Takapuna via Akoranga Station. The new road tunnel would form part of Highway 1 connecting Saint Mary's Bay to Akoranga Drive. 15-year construction timetable, and considered joint-most-efficient in terms of capacity by the government along with option five.
  • Option 5: Identical to option four, except for the southern end of the new bridge would be located at the Wynyard Quarter instead of St Mary's Bay. 15-year construction timetable, and considered joint-most-efficient in terms of capacity by the government along with option four.
 
Map published by Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency detailing the "Emerging Preferred Option" on 6 August 2023

Feedback on the five options was being sought until June 2023, when a final option would be chosen, and with work on the new crossing(s) intended to begin in 2029.[46][47]

The announcement of the final choice was delayed until August 2023, when new Transport Minister David Parker and Prime Minister Chris Hipkins announced a so-called "Emerging Preferred Option" which combined aspects from several of the earlier options put to the public:

  • A tunnel for Auckland Light Rail, crossing from the Wynyard Quarter to Belmont on the North Shore before heading north via stations at Takapuna, Smales Farm, Glenfield, North Harbour, Albany West and Albany Bus Station.
  • Two new road tunnels (one for traffic in each direction) connecting the Central Motorway Junction directly to the North Shore, allowing national north–south through traffic to bypass the CBD entirely, with the existing Harbour Bridge reserved for local traffic.
  • Upgrades to stations on the Northern Busway.
  • "Significant upgrades" to the existing Harbour Bridge, and raising of State Highway 1 from the bridge to Akoranga, to protect it from sea level rise.
  • Extending the Northern Busway across the bridge by allocating it two dedicated lanes to the CBD from Akoranga.
  • Conversion of the existing Harbour Bridge's eastern clip-ons to allow a fully separated active mode path from Akoranga to the CBD.[48][49]

The overall cost was estimated as between $35 and $45 billion, which would make it the most expensive infrastructure project in New Zealand's history.[50][51]

Reception to the plans from experts and commentators was mixed—supporters of a new crossing in the Green party, Labour's coalition partners, were disappointed that the focus was on increasing road capacity rather than exclusively investing in public transit, whereas on the right Labour's political opponents (including Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown) criticised what they saw as an unrealistic pre-election promise which was overly expensive and unlikely to ever be delivered.[52][53] National party leader Christopher Luxon expressed support for the broader plans, describing it as "one of those projects we want to progress as well," but was sceptical that Labour would be able to deliver it on schedule and within budget.[54] The party's transport spokesperson Simeon Brown—a longtime critic of the Auckland Light Rail—criticised both the projected cost and the inclusion of a rail tunnel in the plans, but also expressed general support for the rest of the plans.[55][56]

After National's win in the 2023 General Election, the party announced Auckland Light Rail would be cancelled (including any harbour tunnel) and its $14.6 billion budget spent on a number of road and highway upgrade schemes across New Zealand, including several new busways within Auckland.[57]

See also edit

General
Specific

References edit

  1. ^ "Auckland's $4 billion second harbour crossing as far as 30 years away". North Shore Times/Stuff.co.nz. 2 November 2016. Retrieved 16 July 2017.
  2. ^ "Aucklanders' views sought on Waitematā Harbour Connections | Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency". nzta.govt.nz. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
  3. ^ a b . 4 March 2016. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
  4. ^ a b c Dearnaley, Mathew (30 May 2009). "Agency in no hurry to replace bridge with harbour 'tubes'". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  5. ^ Phillips, Jock (11 March 2010). "The 'Nippon clip-ons'". teara.govt.nz. New Zealand Government. from the original on 10 April 2023. Retrieved 17 June 2023.
  6. ^ "Editorial: Bridge at 50 uniting the city at last". The New Zealand Herald. 30 May 2009. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  7. ^ Waitematā Harbour Crossing Study – Chapter 3, para. 3.1 – Project Objectives
  8. ^ Auckland City District Plan – Isthmus Section, Chapter 12.6.2.4 Second Harbour Crossing
  9. ^ "Auckland's Waterview Tunnel open to traffic at last". Stuff.co.nz. 2 July 2017. Retrieved 2 July 2017.
  10. ^ Dearnaley, Mathew (11 July 2007). "Traffic decline casts shadow on $3b tunnel". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  11. ^ "Auckland's Northern Busway to reach capacity a decade ahead of schedule". Stuff.co.nz. 14 September 2017. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  12. ^ "Plans for rail line through Auckland's North Shore to be determined this year". Stuff.co.nz. 14 March 2017. Retrieved 16 July 2017.
  13. ^ a b "The next harbour crossing: road and rail, or just rail". The New Zealand Herald. 9 March 2019. Retrieved 9 March 2019.
  14. ^ a b "Waka Kotahi Board confirms position on Auckland Harbour Bridge lane reallocation trial | Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency". www.nzta.govt.nz. Retrieved 24 June 2023.
  15. ^ Auckland, Greater (15 August 2022). "A Pathway to a Flourishing Future". Greater Auckland. Retrieved 24 June 2023.
  16. ^ Feasibility study – Watemata Harbour Second Crossing 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine (from the Transit New Zealand website)
  17. ^ Welch, Timothy (3 April 2023). "A short history of doomed second harbour crossing proposals for Auckland – and a quicker, cheaper option". The Conversation. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  18. ^ "Harbour Bridge future questioned". Television New Zealand. Radio New Zealand. 12 March 2006. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  19. ^ Dearnaley, Mathew (10 July 2007). "Tank Farm route for $3b tunnel (+map)". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  20. ^ Gay, Edward (9 July 2007). "Bayswater tunnel could be part of harbour crossing study". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  21. ^ Dearnaley, Mathew (3 December 2007). "New harbour crossing – it's down to Plan A or B". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  22. ^ Dearnaley, Mathew (5 December 2007). "North Shore bosses want tunnel link". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  23. ^ Rudman, Brian (11 July 2007). "Brian Rudman: Hallelujah, talk before bulldozers". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  24. ^ Letters to the editor – Harbour tunnel – Wood, George; The New Zealand Herald, Saturday 14 July 2007, Page A22
  25. ^ Going underground – the latest option for Auckland commutersLG – New Zealand Local Government, Volume 44 No 5, May 2008, Page 5
  26. ^ a b Key decisions on Auckland Harbour Bridge and third harbour crossing[permanent dead link] (NZ Transport Agency press release, Wednesday 2 December 2009. Retrieved 2009-12-02.)
  27. ^ Dearnaley, Mathew (1 June 2009). "Decision on harbour tunnels". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  28. ^ a b Dearnaley, Mathew (12 July 2007). "Overhead option to Tank Farm tunnel". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  29. ^ Dearnaley, Mathew (8 May 2007). "Photo: Longer, more elegant harbour bridge dreamed up". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  30. ^ Taylor, Phil (30 May 2009). "The art of bridging the gap". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  31. ^ Harward, Esther (18 October 2009). "Get foreign help to build next bridge". The Sunday Star-Times. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  32. ^ Dearnaley, Mathew (4 December 2009). "City leaders urge minister to rule out new bridge". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  33. ^ Horrell, Rhiannon (18 November 2009). "Bridge v tunnel for harbour". Central Leader. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  34. ^ Dearnaley, Mathew (3 December 2009). "Minister raises hopes for new harbour link". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  35. ^ . 4 December 2009. Archived from the original on 4 December 2009. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  36. ^ Rudman, Brian (19 March 2010). "No Minister, the tunnels have already won". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 26 March 2010.
  37. ^ https://www.nzta.govt.nz/assets/projects/awhc/docs/preliminary-business-case-report.pdf
  38. ^ L, Matt (22 March 2021). "Where to next for Skypath?". Greater Auckland. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  39. ^ "Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern defends $51 million spent on cancelled Auckland cycle bridge". Newshub. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  40. ^ "Govt scraps Auckland's $785m bridge cycleway". 1 News. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  41. ^ Auckland, Bike (28 April 2021). "FAQ: Liberating The Lane". Bike Auckland. Retrieved 24 June 2023.
  42. ^ "New Zealand Offers Options for Next Auckland Harbor Crossing". Bloomberg.com. 29 March 2023. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  43. ^ "Five options for new Auckland harbour crossing revealed". 1 News. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  44. ^ Niall, Todd (29 March 2023). "Government unveils five options for second Auckland harbour crossing". Stuff. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  45. ^ "About the project | Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency". nzta.govt.nz. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
  46. ^ Silva, Tommy de (31 March 2023). "The five Auckland harbour crossing proposals, explained". The Spinoff. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  47. ^ L, Matt (29 March 2023). "Harbour Crossing Project now estimated to cost $15-25 billion". Greater Auckland. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  48. ^ Agency, NZ Transport. "Waitematā Harbour Connections | Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency". www.nzta.govt.nz. Retrieved 16 October 2023.
  49. ^ "Phased tunnels for second Harbour crossing". The Beehive. Retrieved 16 October 2023.
  50. ^ Menteth, Thames (11 August 2023). "Three new tunnels planned for Auckland harbour to cost up to £21.4bn". Ground Engineering (GE). Retrieved 16 October 2023.
  51. ^ "'No question' second Auckland harbour crossing needed - PM". NZ Herald. 17 October 2023. Retrieved 16 October 2023.
  52. ^ "Labour's 'complex beast' of a transport plan divides Auckland". Newsroom. 8 August 2023. Retrieved 16 October 2023.
  53. ^ Lewis, Oliver. "Auckland harbour crossing just 'electioneering'". businessdesk.co.nz. Retrieved 16 October 2023.
  54. ^ "'Bonkers': Greens slam second harbour crossing as National shows support". NZ Herald. 17 October 2023. Retrieved 16 October 2023.
  55. ^ "National to derail Auckland's light rail". Newsroom. 13 July 2023. Retrieved 16 October 2023.
  56. ^ "Mixed reaction to government's multi-billion Auckland harbour tunnels plan". RNZ. 7 August 2023. Retrieved 16 October 2023.
  57. ^ "National to scrap $14.6b light rail project". NZ Herald. 17 October 2023. Retrieved 16 October 2023.

36°49′51″S 174°44′56″E / 36.830722°S 174.748793°E / -36.830722; 174.748793

second, harbour, crossing, auckland, second, harbour, crossing, redirects, here, other, uses, second, harbour, crossing, disambiguation, second, harbour, crossing, name, given, proposed, second, transport, link, across, waitematā, harbour, auckland, zealand, p. Second Harbour Crossing redirects here For other uses see Second Harbour Crossing disambiguation The Second Harbour Crossing is the name given to the proposed second transport link across the Waitemata Harbour in Auckland New Zealand Planners have also referred to new links across the harbour as the Additional Waitemata Harbour Crossing AWHC or the Waitemata Harbour Connections 1 2 Satellite view of Auckland with Waitemata Harbour separating the North Shore from the rest of the city The existing Auckland Harbour Bridge is near the centre of the image Roughly a third of New Zealand s population live in the Auckland region and the harbour bisects the city between its CBD and the North Shore The current Auckland Harbour Bridge built in 1959 was widened significantly in 1969 but has long been at capacity during peak hours Carrying both national north south and local traffic it is a significant choke point in New Zealand s road network The alternative motorway route around the edge of the harbour is also near peak capacity despite widening programs and is easily gridlocked if the bridge is closed due to an accident or adverse weather conditions The current crossing s limitations are a major contributor to Auckland s wider traffic congestion issues and their accompanying economic impacts New crossings have been proposed repeatedly over the previous decades Most recently in 2023 the Labour government of Chris Hipkins announced plans for a new crossing involving two new road tunnels and a single light rail tunnel to begin construction in 2029 However with Labour s loss in the 2023 General Election these proposals are under review by the new National led government of Prime Minister Christopher Luxon Contents 1 Background 2 Modern proposals 2 1 1996 report 2 2 2006 2009 alignment studies 2 3 2007 Anzac Centenary Bridge alternative 2 4 2010 study 2 5 2011 Skypath 2 6 2023 Waitemata Harbour Connections proposals 3 See also 4 ReferencesBackground edit nbsp Bridging the Waitemata a dream of the very distant future 1911 illustration unbuilt Proposals for a crossing over Waitemata Harbour first arose only a few decades after Auckland was founded by the British in 1840 In 1860 John Bell designed a drawbridge on floating pontoons that would have given cattle and pig farmers in the rural North Shore a more direct route for driving their livestock into the city While the plan included tolls to pay for its construction its estimated cost 16 000 was considered too high 3 Further bridges were proposed in 1927 and 1929 while the earliest tunnel proposal floated during discussions about extending the city s rail network dates to 1920 4 A Royal Commission in 1946 recommended a four lane road bridge but further modelling predicted that there would be a population boom in the North Shore after being connected to the CBD necessitating at least six lanes for future proofing The Auckland Harbour Authority was established in 1951 to lobby for funding seek tenders from architects and construction firms and further develop the plans which had now settled on a compromise five lane bridge with two additional walking and cycling lanes However the National government led by Prime Minister Sidney Holland insisted that the total budget could not exceed 5 million This led to a so called austerity design of a four lane bridge without pedestrian cycling lanes at all 3 Construction began on the Auckland Harbour Bridge in 1954 and it opened in 1959 with toll booths in place until 1984 Traffic was immediately higher than expected from its first day of opening By 1969 it had become obvious that the bridge was too narrow and two additional lanes known locally as the Nippon clip ons 5 were added on each side creating an eight lane bridge At the time it was predicted that the increased capacity would last only until about 1985 6 Even with the clip on sections and new traffic management in place the Harbour Bridge was soon experiencing congestion during rush hours again Proposals for a second bridge soon started to be discussed such as one connecting from Meola Reef to Birkenhead though the idea was abandoned in the 1970s after public outcry 4 Studies into traffic patterns across the Auckland region consistently predicted that congestion would continue to get worse as the North Shore grew further and Auckland City became more densely settled and pressure for another harbour crossing has grown in tandem with the city s growth in population New Zealand also experiences regular earthquakes and volcanic eruptions and having only one crossing which could be disabled during a natural disaster has been identified as an issue of national concern 7 However the substantial cost of any new crossing as well as the disruption to communities on both sides of the harbour during construction the North Shore is now a densely populated urban district unlike when the original bridge was built has repeatedly dissuaded governments from investing in any specific plan Instead planners have tended to focus on shorter term solutions which mitigate the urgency for a new crossing For example Auckland Council s 2011 ten year transit plan review explicitly argued that transit proposals which avoid the need for a second harbour crossing altogether or at the very least delay its necessity should be prioritised 8 The most notable of these projects the Western Ring Route a combination of upgraded and new motorway sections skirting the western edge of the harbour and suburbs to provide relief for traffic travelling between the North Shore and West Auckland was completed in July 2017 with the opening of the Waterview Connection 9 Opponents of any new crossing have also pointed to multiple traffic surveys which have found that the number of car trips across the existing bridge during peak times has remained relatively stable since the 1990s as the feeder junctions and roads at either end of the bridge are also at capacity 10 New journeys have instead been made possible with investment in better public transport and specifically bus routes since the construction of the hugely successful Northern Busway 50 of peak time passengers across the bridge are now carried by bus 11 However there are few further options for continuing to increase cross harbour capacity without an entirely new bridge or tunnel In 2017 Auckland Transport s projections indicated that the Northern Busway would reach maximum capacity in 2026 twenty years earlier than originally expected and there would soon be overcrowding at Albany Sunnynook and Akoranga stations The only option for increasing capacity further on the route is for it to be converted into a light rail line but with the existing bridge at its weight limit this will be impossible until a second crossing is built to carry the line across to the CBD 12 The number of trucks making north south journeys across the bridge is also predicted to more than double by mid century further emphasising the impact of congestion on the bridge to New Zealand s wider economy 13 The failure to provide pedestrian or cycle lanes on the original bridge has also meant that there is no foot route across the harbour While Auckland Transport has long provided a number of ferry routes for passengers travelling from areas of the North Shore to the central Downtown Ferry Terminal near Waitemata Station in the CBD the inconvenience of the ferries in terms of both time and expense has long been seen as dissuading many Aucklanders from switching to active modes of travel which would further help ease road congestion Auckland Transport s Transport Emissions Reduction Pathway published in August 2022 reaffirmed that a new fixed crossing with pedestrian and cycling lanes is seen as an essential part of its longer term plans 14 15 Modern proposals edit1996 report edit Following a detailed scoping study undertaken in 1996 Transit New Zealand identified its preferred options for a new crossing either a new bridge approximately 500m west of the bridge connecting to the North Western Motorway SH16 via a tunnel underneath Ponsonby and Grey Lynn or a tunnel slightly to the east of the bridge connecting to the Central Motorway Junction via twin cut and cover tunnels under the western CBD Victoria Park 16 A follow up study in 2003 found that these proposals if both built together would cost the equivalent of 4 5 billion in 2022 dollars 17 2006 2009 alignment studies edit nbsp A map of NZTA s preferred route Option 2C for two new harbour crossings published in 2008In 2006 Transit New Zealand consulted on a new 10 year plan and included funding for another study into a second harbour road crossing 18 This included the possibility of landing a future tunnel underneath the Western Reclamation now known as the Wynyard Quarter with a connecting tunnel to south of Victoria Park Costs were estimated at NZ 3 billion 19 A possible tunnel between Mechanics Bay and Northcote was also considered in the feasibility studies but faced increasing criticism from local groups and was seen as problematic due to the denser residential zones and geographic difficulties faced on such an alignment 20 In December 2007 Transit New Zealand noted that more than 160 options had been narrowed down and the final option known as option 2C was published in early 2008 It consisted of two new crossings made of two tunnels each The first possible alignment approximately 4 5 km would be a parallel link several hundred meters directly to the east of the existing bridge while the second alignment approximately 6 5 km would start in the same general environs in the North Shore but travel diagonally southeastwards to link up with the motorway at Grafton Gully east of the Auckland CBD The second option due to the need to cross shipping lanes would need to be a tunnel It would also have possibly connected to the CBD via a side branch tunnel for use by public transport only 21 There were a number of reactions from local community and lobbying groups to the consultation North Shore City noted that it preferred a tunnel option for aesthetic reasons and for the option to convert it to light rail at a future stage 22 Commentators like Brian Rudman noted that it would make the most sense to keep the new crossing for public transport only possibly to connect with a rail tunnel to Britomart Transport Centre now known as Waitemata Station 23 This statement was largely supported by North Shore mayor George Wood who noted that public transport provision on any new crossing including the possibility for light rail or heavy rail to connect to Waitemata Station had been part of North Shore Council s plans for many years 24 In mid 2008 the Waitemata Harbour Crossing study group a private lobbying group representing local companies released their recommended option which would have connected from the existing Esmonde and Onewa motorway interchanges on the North Shore side to Auckland CBD reaching land in the southwestern part of the Wynyard Quarter though the links would have continued as tunnels for some further distance likely going under Victoria Park The option selected from several hundred considered alignments involved four separate tunnels two for motor vehicles and two for public transport the demolition of Victoria Park Viaduct and a new rail station in the Wynyard Quarter The total costs were estimated at between NZ 3 7 to NZ 4 1 billion and their study predicted that it would increase the number of journeys across the harbour by 80 by 2041 with 30 by public transport 25 In mid 2009 Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency NZTA the successor to Transit New Zealand safeguarded the route so that further redevelopment on the Wynyard Quarter would not negatively affect the future tunnel 4 On 2 December 2009 NZTA announced that designations would be protected for the four tunnel option though funding to build them was not allocated in upcoming budgets and no future date for construction was announced 26 27 2007 Anzac Centenary Bridge alternative edit During the public discussions in 2007 a group of local politicians and architects put forward a proposal to build a new much larger bridge to the east of the existing bridge and then demolish the latter The new cantilever spar cable stayed bridge designed by the Jasmax architectural firm would be built in time for the 100 year memorial of the Gallipoli landings in 1915 28 The new bridge would be roughly 50 longer than the existing one and triple the capacity by including corridors for light rail cyclists and pedestrians as well as cars and buses The designers argued that the new bridge would pay for itself by freeing up 35 hectares of land and 3 3 km of shoreline for redevelopment in some of the most sought after Auckland locations like Saint Mary s Bay which were currently taken up by large motorway approaches The proposed bridge would also be cheaper to operate and unlike a tunnel would not need emission vents 28 29 In October 2009 the bridge option again surfaced with a group of backers suggesting that a bridge would be a better option from both urban design and transport planning perspectives 30 However critics argued that the extra investment required to meet the tight 2015 deadline would necessitate taking funds away from other crucial transport initiatives in the region 31 The then mayor of North Shore Andrew Williams and the then chairman of the Auckland Regional Council Mike Lee both supported the earlier studies into a tunnel The then mayor of Auckland City John Banks also favoured the tunnel option though he did not outright oppose the bridge idea though the then mayor of Manukau City Len Brown considered the bridge proposal worthy of consideration 32 A more detailed concept for the bridge published in late 2009 included eight traffic lanes including separate truck and bus lanes and two light rail tracks on a bridge deck alongside walking and cycling paths possibly with travelators Its designers claimed that the estimated NZ 2 3 billion cost of the bridge would be significantly cheaper than existing tunnel plans estimated at NZ 4 billion 33 In December 2009 NZTA announced that though designations would be sought for new tunnel options a future bridge was not being precluded so as to protect against conflict with future development in the Wynyard Quarter 26 The lobby group for the bridge regarded this as a success though their original timeframe had been substantially pushed back with construction not planned to start until 2015 34 35 The centenary bridge planning group disbanded soon after and there is now no organisation pursuing the bridge 2010 study edit In March 2010 tendering for another second crossing study was announced by Minister of Transport Steven Joyce The decision was criticised in an editorial in The New Zealand Herald for wasting time and money since the previous study only a few years earlier had already at cost of over 1 million conclusively ruled in favour of new tunnels over any new bridges 36 The eventual report made a business case for three new harbour crossings a bridge a road tunnel and a heavy rain tunnel for a total estimated cost of 6 billion The new bridge would have included tolled bike lanes 37 2011 Skypath edit To save waiting for an entirely new crossing in 2011 NZTA proposed focusing on only part of the 2010 recommendations and adding new pedestrian and cycling paths onto the existing bridge The plan initially had strong local support and was added to Auckland Transport s strategic priority list soon after with resource consent sought and granted in 2016 The new Labour led government elected in 2017 also pledged to fund the crossing 38 However concerns over the complexity of adding extra weight to the existing support columns led to the plan being revised in 2019 with Skypath instead proposed to run beneath the existing bridge on its own entirely independent set of columns The plan was eventually cancelled altogether in 2021 after construction costs had grown to an estimated 785m by which point planners argued that it would be more efficient to simply build an entirely new crossing altogether as originally planned 39 40 Local activists have continued to campaign for one of the existing bridge s lanes to be liberated for cycling arguing that it would still provide a net increase to the bridge s capacity by encouraging commuters to switch away from cars However NZTA has repeatedly rejected requests for a trial lane after coming to the conclusion that collision risks to pedestrians and cyclists from passing traffic could not be mitigated 41 14 2023 Waitemata Harbour Connections proposals editIn 2019 NZTA commissioned consultancy firm PwC to examine the business cases for and against a wide range of second crossing options taking into account historical proposals and current economic and demographic trends The authors noted that 170 000 vehicles were crossing the bridge each day including 11 000 trucks and more than 1 000 buses While car passengers during peak hours 7 9am on weekdays had remained largely static over the previous 25 years due to feeder roads on either side of the bridge having reached capacity the number of bus and truck journeys continues to grow with 26 000 truck crossings predicted by 2046 The authors argued that previous road plus rail proposals would be less efficient than new heavy rail tunnels for cargo and passenger services 13 nbsp Option 1 nbsp Option 2 nbsp Option 3 nbsp Option 4 nbsp Option 5In March 2023 Transport Minister Michael Wood announced that the government was launching a public consultation on five options for new Waitemata Harbour Connections informed by the findings of the 2019 review 42 43 44 The options vary in scale and cost with a mixture of tunnels bridges and different modes of transport though all will integrate with plans that are simultaneously underway for a new Auckland Light Rail route between Auckland Airport and the CBD which will have a station in the Wynyard Quarter 45 Option 1 Two new tunnels A light rail line from Wynyard Quarter to Smales Farm via Belmont and Takapuna and a road tunnel forming a new section of Highway 1 from Saint Mary s Bay to Akoranga Drive The existing bridge would be reconfigured with more bus lanes and new pedestrian cycle lanes Total cost estimated at 25 billion the most expensive of the options with a 15 year construction timetable Option 2 One new bridge adjacent to the existing one with a mixture of car bus and pedestrian cycle lanes as well as a light rail line connecting the Wynyard Quarter to Takapuna via Akoranga Station Total cost estimated at 15 billion with a 10 year construction timetable Noted in the government s announcement as the cheapest option but also the least resilient Option 3 One new bridge one new tunnel A new light rail line running through the tunnel from the Wynyard Quarter to Takapuna via Birkenhead Northcote and Akoranga stations The new bridge would combine car and pedestrian cycle lanes to connect Westhaven to Northcote Point for vehicles travelling through Auckland while local traffic would be concentrated on the existing bridge 10 year construction timetable but noted in the government s announcement as the least efficient option in terms of increasing total cross harbour capacity Option 4 One new bridge one new tunnel A new bridge east of the existing one connecting St Mary s Bay at its southern end to Sulphur Beach at the north to carry pedestrian cycle lanes as well as a new light rail line The rail line would connect the Wynyard Quarter with Takapuna via Akoranga Station The new road tunnel would form part of Highway 1 connecting Saint Mary s Bay to Akoranga Drive 15 year construction timetable and considered joint most efficient in terms of capacity by the government along with option five Option 5 Identical to option four except for the southern end of the new bridge would be located at the Wynyard Quarter instead of St Mary s Bay 15 year construction timetable and considered joint most efficient in terms of capacity by the government along with option four nbsp Map published by Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency detailing the Emerging Preferred Option on 6 August 2023Feedback on the five options was being sought until June 2023 when a final option would be chosen and with work on the new crossing s intended to begin in 2029 46 47 The announcement of the final choice was delayed until August 2023 when new Transport Minister David Parker and Prime Minister Chris Hipkins announced a so called Emerging Preferred Option which combined aspects from several of the earlier options put to the public A tunnel for Auckland Light Rail crossing from the Wynyard Quarter to Belmont on the North Shore before heading north via stations at Takapuna Smales Farm Glenfield North Harbour Albany West and Albany Bus Station Two new road tunnels one for traffic in each direction connecting the Central Motorway Junction directly to the North Shore allowing national north south through traffic to bypass the CBD entirely with the existing Harbour Bridge reserved for local traffic Upgrades to stations on the Northern Busway Significant upgrades to the existing Harbour Bridge and raising of State Highway 1 from the bridge to Akoranga to protect it from sea level rise Extending the Northern Busway across the bridge by allocating it two dedicated lanes to the CBD from Akoranga Conversion of the existing Harbour Bridge s eastern clip ons to allow a fully separated active mode path from Akoranga to the CBD 48 49 The overall cost was estimated as between 35 and 45 billion which would make it the most expensive infrastructure project in New Zealand s history 50 51 Reception to the plans from experts and commentators was mixed supporters of a new crossing in the Green party Labour s coalition partners were disappointed that the focus was on increasing road capacity rather than exclusively investing in public transit whereas on the right Labour s political opponents including Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown criticised what they saw as an unrealistic pre election promise which was overly expensive and unlikely to ever be delivered 52 53 National party leader Christopher Luxon expressed support for the broader plans describing it as one of those projects we want to progress as well but was sceptical that Labour would be able to deliver it on schedule and within budget 54 The party s transport spokesperson Simeon Brown a longtime critic of the Auckland Light Rail criticised both the projected cost and the inclusion of a rail tunnel in the plans but also expressed general support for the rest of the plans 55 56 After National s win in the 2023 General Election the party announced Auckland Light Rail would be cancelled including any harbour tunnel and its 14 6 billion budget spent on a number of road and highway upgrade schemes across New Zealand including several new busways within Auckland 57 See also editGeneralPublic transport in Auckland Transport in Auckland North Shore Line New ZealandSpecificCentral Motorway Junction the major motorway junction connecting southeast of the bridge Newmarket Viaduct similarly important traffic bottleneck on other side of Auckland CBD Western Reclamation large industrial area east of the bridge possible site of 2nd crossingReferences edit Auckland s 4 billion second harbour crossing as far as 30 years away North Shore Times Stuff co nz 2 November 2016 Retrieved 16 July 2017 Aucklanders views sought on Waitemata Harbour Connections Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency nzta govt nz Retrieved 8 June 2023 a b The history of the Auckland Harbour Bridge Auckland News Sport Traffic and Weather from NZ Herald NZ Herald News 4 March 2016 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 8 June 2023 a b c Dearnaley Mathew 30 May 2009 Agency in no hurry to replace bridge with harbour tubes The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 7 November 2011 Phillips Jock 11 March 2010 The Nippon clip ons teara govt nz New Zealand Government Archived from the original on 10 April 2023 Retrieved 17 June 2023 Editorial Bridge at 50 uniting the city at last The New Zealand Herald 30 May 2009 Retrieved 7 November 2011 Waitemata Harbour Crossing Study Chapter 3 para 3 1 Project Objectives Auckland City District Plan Isthmus Section Chapter 12 6 2 4 Second Harbour Crossing Auckland s Waterview Tunnel open to traffic at last Stuff co nz 2 July 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 Dearnaley Mathew 11 July 2007 Traffic decline casts shadow on 3b tunnel The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 7 November 2011 Auckland s Northern Busway to reach capacity a decade ahead of schedule Stuff co nz 14 September 2017 Retrieved 29 November 2017 Plans for rail line through Auckland s North Shore to be determined this year Stuff co nz 14 March 2017 Retrieved 16 July 2017 a b The next harbour crossing road and rail or just rail The New Zealand Herald 9 March 2019 Retrieved 9 March 2019 a b Waka Kotahi Board confirms position on Auckland Harbour Bridge lane reallocation trial Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency www nzta govt nz Retrieved 24 June 2023 Auckland Greater 15 August 2022 A Pathway to a Flourishing Future Greater Auckland Retrieved 24 June 2023 Feasibility study Watemata Harbour Second Crossing Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine from the Transit New Zealand website Welch Timothy 3 April 2023 A short history of doomed second harbour crossing proposals for Auckland and a quicker cheaper option The Conversation Retrieved 7 June 2023 Harbour Bridge future questioned Television New Zealand Radio New Zealand 12 March 2006 Retrieved 7 November 2011 Dearnaley Mathew 10 July 2007 Tank Farm route for 3b tunnel map The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 7 November 2011 Gay Edward 9 July 2007 Bayswater tunnel could be part of harbour crossing study The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 7 November 2011 Dearnaley Mathew 3 December 2007 New harbour crossing it s down to Plan A or B The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 7 November 2011 Dearnaley Mathew 5 December 2007 North Shore bosses want tunnel link The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 7 November 2011 Rudman Brian 11 July 2007 Brian Rudman Hallelujah talk before bulldozers The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 7 November 2011 Letters to the editor Harbour tunnel Wood George The New Zealand Herald Saturday 14 July 2007 Page A22 Going underground the latest option for Auckland commuters LG New Zealand Local Government Volume 44 No 5 May 2008 Page 5 a b Key decisions on Auckland Harbour Bridge and third harbour crossing permanent dead link NZ Transport Agency press release Wednesday 2 December 2009 Retrieved 2009 12 02 Dearnaley Mathew 1 June 2009 Decision on harbour tunnels The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 7 November 2011 a b Dearnaley Mathew 12 July 2007 Overhead option to Tank Farm tunnel The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 7 November 2011 Dearnaley Mathew 8 May 2007 Photo Longer more elegant harbour bridge dreamed up The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 7 November 2011 Taylor Phil 30 May 2009 The art of bridging the gap The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 7 November 2011 Harward Esther 18 October 2009 Get foreign help to build next bridge The Sunday Star Times Retrieved 7 November 2011 Dearnaley Mathew 4 December 2009 City leaders urge minister to rule out new bridge The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 7 November 2011 Horrell Rhiannon 18 November 2009 Bridge v tunnel for harbour Central Leader Retrieved 7 November 2011 Dearnaley Mathew 3 December 2009 Minister raises hopes for new harbour link The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 7 November 2011 New Auckland Harbour Bridge Harbour Bridge 4 December 2009 Archived from the original on 4 December 2009 Retrieved 19 June 2023 Rudman Brian 19 March 2010 No Minister the tunnels have already won The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 26 March 2010 https www nzta govt nz assets projects awhc docs preliminary business case report pdf L Matt 22 March 2021 Where to next for Skypath Greater Auckland Retrieved 7 June 2023 Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern defends 51 million spent on cancelled Auckland cycle bridge Newshub Retrieved 7 June 2023 Govt scraps Auckland s 785m bridge cycleway 1 News Retrieved 7 June 2023 Auckland Bike 28 April 2021 FAQ Liberating The Lane Bike Auckland Retrieved 24 June 2023 New Zealand Offers Options for Next Auckland Harbor Crossing Bloomberg com 29 March 2023 Retrieved 7 June 2023 Five options for new Auckland harbour crossing revealed 1 News Retrieved 7 June 2023 Niall Todd 29 March 2023 Government unveils five options for second Auckland harbour crossing Stuff Retrieved 7 June 2023 About the project Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency nzta govt nz Retrieved 8 June 2023 Silva Tommy de 31 March 2023 The five Auckland harbour crossing proposals explained The Spinoff Retrieved 7 June 2023 L Matt 29 March 2023 Harbour Crossing Project now estimated to cost 15 25 billion Greater Auckland Retrieved 7 June 2023 Agency NZ Transport Waitemata Harbour Connections Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency www nzta govt nz Retrieved 16 October 2023 Phased tunnels for second Harbour crossing The Beehive Retrieved 16 October 2023 Menteth Thames 11 August 2023 Three new tunnels planned for Auckland harbour to cost up to 21 4bn Ground Engineering GE Retrieved 16 October 2023 No question second Auckland harbour crossing needed PM NZ Herald 17 October 2023 Retrieved 16 October 2023 Labour s complex beast of a transport plan divides Auckland Newsroom 8 August 2023 Retrieved 16 October 2023 Lewis Oliver Auckland harbour crossing just electioneering businessdesk co nz Retrieved 16 October 2023 Bonkers Greens slam second harbour crossing as National shows support NZ Herald 17 October 2023 Retrieved 16 October 2023 National to derail Auckland s light rail Newsroom 13 July 2023 Retrieved 16 October 2023 Mixed reaction to government s multi billion Auckland harbour tunnels plan RNZ 7 August 2023 Retrieved 16 October 2023 National to scrap 14 6b light rail project NZ Herald 17 October 2023 Retrieved 16 October 2023 36 49 51 S 174 44 56 E 36 830722 S 174 748793 E 36 830722 174 748793 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Second Harbour Crossing Auckland amp oldid 1189623300, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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