Hard News: The Sky Trench
39 Responses
First ←Older Page 1 2 Newer→ Last
-
-
NZTA people are obviously not cyclists.
They also got it very wrong on Wellington's silly flyover too, but fortunately the people eventually won. -
Nice high walls. Could be a good place to grow one's pot plants.
-
'no-one could have anticipated'
Well not quite. I was afraid of this very outcome because of the ghastly thing done by Auckland Transport on the K Rd overbridge earlier, so I set out to engage with both NZTA and Auckland Council before any designs were begun as I was one of the those who lobbied actively for this project to happen [here: http://transportblog.co.nz/2014/05/19/photo-of-the-day-concrete-journey/]
I discussed it with design champion Ludo at the actual launch of the programme http://transportblog.co.nz/2015/02/02/celebrating-recent-auckland-cycling-and-walking-projects/, who didn't engage, and I tried over and over to get NZTA to discuss their plans with me. I did get an email from the project manager saying she would send me the plans to date then meet and discuss. Neither happened. I raised it with the NZTA AKL head, by then it was too late, apparently.
The justification for the rush is a ribbon cutting deadline set by the PM's office. I still don't see why they couldn't have listened to a bit of counterfactual from a likely user, and had a more considered design approach. A more human scaled barrier then wouldn't have needed to be ordered from Germany [there's a few ironies there that I will resist].... so close, so monstered by engineering.
-
This is very disappointing. Not just because its a lousy solution, and not just that it shows that NZTA clearly don't know much about this new fangled cycling hocus pocus, but because it shows that the user-based design approach which is so obviously required is being equally obviously eschewed.
-
people throwing objects off the bridge onto the motorway below (which they clearly will not)
Sez here there were 27 incidents in one three month period:
http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/regional/52460/fences-to-stop-objects-being-thrown-on-motorways
and hence fences are now a standard. -
The justification for the rush is a ribbon cutting deadline set by the PM’s office.
Good grief.
-
Love to know why some fairly simple looking steel or aluminium box sections need to come all the way from fucking Germany.
-
Russell Brown, in reply to
The justification for the rush is a ribbon cutting deadline set by the PM’s office.
Good grief.
On one hand, I'm all for such projects getting a fast track, for whatever reason. On the other, it's like "Sorry, no time to listen to the people we're ostensibly designing this project for! Prime Minister is coming!"
-
Russell Brown, in reply to
Sez here there were 27 incidents in one three month period:
http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/regional/52460/fences-to-stop-objects-being-thrown-on-motorways
and hence fences are now a standard.In 2009, apparently. And not just high:
But bridges are now being built with high fences that curve inwards, he says.
Not so as I've been able to see, they're not. I can't actually think of one.
-
Saw a few in Tokyo once.
-
Rich of Observationz, in reply to
I imagine there'd be a risk assessment - is road design covered by H&S legislation nowadays? Maybe the number of incidents in an area has a bearing. But one could envisage a barrier that was less obvious - you could have it under the bridge, or a net over the road?
(or a cop on a nearby roof with a rifle to slot any scallies in the head before they throw their rocks - that's how they do it in the US)
-
Sacha, in reply to
Only curved barrier I have seen is Grafton Bridge. This one looks ridiculously over-engineered for the location and the risk.
-
Patrick Reynolds, in reply to
See Matt's post, all other local overbridges are at 1.2-1.4m [except K Rd] there has been, as far as we know only one incident from these bridges in recent years.
If pursuit of zero harm is NZTA's policy then why is there any speed limit over about 10kph? 300 people will die on their roads this year because of the speed of barely controlled tin boxes being flung around, it seems we accept this risk.
When did we decide that these current heights are unacceptable low?
-
I'm not an expert, but possibly the legal requirements vary if one is considering an existing structure or a new build, as it would be unreasonable to retrofit all existing bridges.
Only one incident in recent years is out of kilter with the 2009 figure of 27 in three months - unless it was all the one person and they're in jail now?
-
I see a gap in the market for helmet mounted periscope binoculars...
Won't the insides of these 'chutes' just end up tagged to hell, anyway?
-
Sacha, in reply to
possibly the legal requirements vary if one is considering an existing structure or a new build
but only one leg of the new cycleway route is overengineered for barrier height.
-
Lilith __, in reply to
I’m all for such projects getting a fast track, for whatever reason. On the other, it’s like “Sorry, no time to listen to the people we’re ostensibly designing this project for!
Chch people are now familiar with this procedure. Special powers are not used for good. Public and/or expert opinion is gathered so it can be disregarded.
-
Russell Brown, in reply to
possibly the legal requirements vary if one is considering an existing structure or a new build
but only one leg of the new cycleway route is overengineered for barrier height.
And the Upper Queen Street overbridge (with a much bigger drop) and the St Lukes Road bridge (an entirely new structure) both have new shared paths – but not the giant walls. It is not easily explicable.
-
Distinctly New Zealand would have had the cars.
Words / Lyrics / Story telling. Dennis Glover perhaps, covering suicide and the collapse of farming, hence the fence.
What was the option that came with the over engineering from Germany called?
-
The Princes St overbridge has a curved wall doesn't it? Built after that schoolboy threw a concrete block through a car windscreen killing the driver instantly in about 2005?
-
chris, in reply to
Probably not what you’d want to hear but as an acrophobic those walls would mean the difference for me between riding and getting off and walking the bike.
-
James Littlewood*, in reply to
On one hand, I'm all for such projects getting a fast track, for whatever reason. On the other ...
A simple little UBD wouldn't had to have slowed things down at all. If it was a really massive, bells and whistles number (which it wouldn't be) then it might have taken a couple of months. Big deal.
Hell, Patrick was even throwing it at them for nix!
-
With random object dispersal on byways being such an issue, why not go the whole hog with home grown kiwi solutions - Kelly Tarlton acrylic tunnels with some magnification built in.
-
Jeremy Andrew, in reply to
Words / Lyrics / Story telling. Dennis Glover perhaps, covering suicide and the collapse of farming, hence the fence.
"Come on, John
The time has come
Its time to go
Now don't be slow
Come on!
...."Wrong bridge though.
Post your response…
This topic is closed.