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State Highway 25 (New Zealand)

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Schwede66 (talk | contribs) at 10:08, 17 April 2020 (Schwede66 moved page New Zealand State Highway 25 to State Highway 25 (New Zealand): as per the uncontroversial decision at Talk:State_Highway_1_(New_Zealand)#Requested_move_29_March_2020). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

State Highway 25 shield}}
State Highway 25
Route information
Maintained by NZ Transport Agency
Length231 km (144 mi)
Major junctions
West endSH 2 near Mangatarata
East endSH 2 at Waihi
Location
CountryNew Zealand
Primary
destinations
Thames, Coromandel, Whitianga, Tairua, Pauanui, Whangamata
Highway system
SH 24 SH 26

State Highway 25 (SH 25) is a North Island state highway in New Zealand that loops around the Coromandel Peninsula. It is a major route for holidaymakers and tourists which has access to some of New Zealand's most idyllic beach holiday spots. The summer period around Christmas and New Year's Eve is a particularly busy period for the highway. The road is very scenic, but also windy in many parts as well as single carriage on the entire route, and is prone to accidents. It is New Zealand's third longest two-digit state highway, after SH 35 and SH 94. It is part of the Pacific Coast Highway.

There is one spur road, SH 25A, that crosses the peninsula west to east, almost intersecting SH 25 at both ends.

Route

SH 25 begins at SH 2 3 km north of Mangatarata at a recently constructed roundabout.[1] The highway travels eastwards across the Hauraki Plains where it crosses the Waihou River on the new Kopu Bridge, it hits the junction with SH 26 and moves northwards through the township of Thames. The road continues north, skirting the Firth of Thames into the small township of Coromandel before travelling eastwards across the peninsula to the Bay of Plenty side towards Whitianga. SH 25 veers south-west on the Whitianga Bypass, through Coroglen and Whenuakite and over windy hill roads into Tairua, where travellers can access Pauanui. SH 25 then continues southwards, past the intersection of the spur road 25A and towards Whangamata. The road bypasses Whangamata on the west side and continues southbound until it reaches its final terminus in Waihi at the intersection of Kenny Street & Rosemont Road.[2]

Spurs

State Highway 25A marker

State Highway 25A

LocationKopu–Hikuai
Length28.2 km (17.5 mi)

State Highway 25A (SH 25A) traverses the Coromandel Peninsula from west to east directly. This 28.2 km road begins at the intersection of SH 26 only 400m away from the SH 25/SH 26 intersection. It terminates on SH 25 between Tairua and Whangamata.[3]

Route changes

SH 25 once went through the town centres of Whitianga and Whangamata. In Whitianga, the bypass was constructed carrying traffic away from the original route via Buffalo Beach Road, Albert Street, and South Highway.[4] In Whangamata, SH 25 bypasses the town via Tairua Road instead of using Harry Watt Drive, Hetherington Road and Port Road.

In the early 2000s the last sections of the highway were sealed, particularly around the northern end of the Coromandel Peninsula between Coromandel township and Whitianga.[5]

In 2011 NZTA completed the new Kopu Bridge, a two lane structure, across the Waihou River. It replaced the previous one-lane bridge, where at times holidaymakers had to queue for hours to cross. The old bridge, which was built in 1928, is scheduled to be deconstructed although a key part of its history will still be preserved.[6][7]

See also

References

  1. ^ "SH2/25 Intersection Improvement". New Zealand Transport Agency. Retrieved 3 March 2016.
  2. ^ State Highway 25 on Google Maps
  3. ^ State Highway 25A on Google Maps
  4. ^ "Revoking a Section of State Highway and Declaring a Section of State Highway-State Highway 25, Thames-Coromandel District". NZ Gazette. 6 September 2012. Retrieved 5 July 2016.
  5. ^ "Regions on the road to safer driving". New Zealand Herald. 30 June 2000.
  6. ^ "Kopu Bridge replacement". New Zealand Transport Agency. Retrieved 3 March 2016.
  7. ^ "The future of old Kopu Bridge". New Zealand Transport Agency. 11 July 2013.

External links