Highway closure a mixed bag

A two month closure of the Desert Road through the central North Island is a mixed bag for Waipā.

In Te Awamutu and the King Country retailers and tourism operators are hoping for a busier than normal summer as the closure pushes more traffic into the King Country and Waipā.

But traffic numbers coming off the Waikato Expressway to visit Cambridge could be reduced.

Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency closed State Highway 1 between Tūrangi and Waiouru on Monday for road works and to replace the wooden deck of the almost 60-year-old  Mangatoetoenui Bridge about 20km south of the State Highway 46 turn off.

Susan O’Regan

This means between 3000 and nearly 6000 drivers will take alternative routes from north to south and back again over the next two months.

Waipā mayor Susan O’Regan did not expect to see a significant impact in the district but Waitomo mayor John Robertson expected established stops like Piopio to be busier as a result of the road closure.

Murray Hunt furnishers manager Bev Cooper thought the road closure could bring more people through Ōtorohanga and into the branch there.

“It will be interesting to see,” she said. “Mostly we get people stopping off who are driving Auckland to Wellington.”

Brodie Hewlett, left, with mother Bev Cooper in the Murray Hunt Furnishers Beds R Us Te Awamutu store.

She didn’t expect any extra traffic through the Te Awamutu branches which generally attracted Cambridge and Hamilton shoppers.

Meanwhile, work has started on State Highway 3 from between Ryburn Road to Forkert Road in Ōhaupō.

The work is expected to take seven weeks, and one lane will remain open for southbound traffic at all times while a detour will add about eight minutes to the journey for light vehicles.

Maungatoetoenui Bridge, Desert Rd

More Recent News

Waipā women’s hub launched

The Waipā Women’s Hub marked its first year in operation with a pre-Christmas bash that also served to thank businesses and organisations that have supported them. The soirée at Te Awamutu’s Lyceum Club premises served…

Anti-fluoride lawyer from USA to speak

American lawyer Michael Connett has been booked to speak in Cambridge early next month. Connett has been a prominent figure in a legal crusade against fluoride in drinking water in the US, and he will…

Big rise in Te Awamutu bus use

The investment made into Waikato public transport is bearing fruit with the numbers of people catching the bus last year from regional towns to and from Hamilton well up on 2023. The big mover was…

Community’s rapid response

Pirongia Volunteer Fire Brigade’s new first rapid response medical vehicle was among the units that went to a Te Pahu shed blaze on Sunday night. It took about two hours for Pirongia firefighters to extinguish…