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List of motorways and expressways in New Zealand

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This is a list of motorways and expressways in New Zealand, including some proposed and under construction. There are currently 360 km of motorways and expressways in New Zealand, with 103 km under construction and a further 65 km expected to be completed by 2029 providing a total of 516 km of expressway in New Zealand expected by 2029.

Expressways in New Zealand are high standard all-purpose roads, usually dual carriageway, mainly for through traffic with no restrictions. Intersections may be controlled at-grade with roundabouts or traffic signals, or fully grade separated.[1][2]

Motorways in New Zealand are dual carriageway roads designed for efficient high volume motor vehicle traffic. They have a no stopping restriction and are closed to pedestrian, cycle and animal traffic. Intersections are grade-separated.[1][3]

Summary

Name State Highway(s) Type Length First section opened
Auckland Northern Motorway SH 1 Motorway 39 km (24 mi). 1959
Auckland Southern Motorway SH 1 Motorway 44 km (27 mi) 1953
Waikato Expressway SH 1 Expressway 93 km (58 mi) 1995
Kapiti Expressway SH 1 Expressway 18 km (11 mi) 2017
Johnsonville–Porirua Motorway SH 1 Motorway 11 km (7 mi) 1950
Wellington Urban Motorway SH 1 Motorway 7 km (4 mi) 1969
Christchurch Northern Motorway SH 1 Motorway 14 km (9 mi) 1967
Western Belfast Bypass SH 1 Motorway 5 km (3 mi) 2017
Dunedin Southern Motorway SH 1 Expressway (Kensington–Lookout Point)
Motorway (Lookout Point–Mosgiel)
13 km (8 mi) 1972
Tauranga Eastern Link SH 2 Expressway (Te Maunga–Papamoa)
Motorway (Papamoa–Paengaroa)
23 km (14 mi) 2015
Hutt Expressway SH 2 Expressway 30 km (19 mi) early 1970s
Northwestern Motorway SH 16 Motorway 21 km (13 mi) 1952
Upper Harbour Motorway SH 18 Motorway 12 km (7 mi) 2007
Southwestern Motorway SH 20 Motorway 24 km (15 mi) 1977
Auckland Airport Motorway SH 20A Motorway 4 km (2 mi) 1997
Christchurch Southern Motorway SH 76 Motorway 7 km (4 mi) 1981

Under construction

Name State Highway(s) Type Length Expected opening
Christchurch Northern Motorway (extension to Saint Albans) SH 74 Motorway 9 km (6 mi) 2020
Christchurch Southern Motorway (extension to Rolleston) SH 76; SH 1 Motorway (SH 76 section)
Expressway (SH 1 section)
13 km (8 mi) 2020
Transmission Gully Motorway SH 1 Motorway 27 km (17 mi) late 2020
Waikato Expressway (Hamilton section) SH 1 Expressway 22 km (14 mi) 2021
Kapiti Expressway (Peka Peka to Otaki section) SH 1 Expressway 13 km (8 mi) 2021
Auckland Northern Motorway (Puhoi to Warkworth) SH 1 Motorway 19 km (12 mi) 2022
Upper Harbour Highway extension (Northern Corridor) SH 18 Motorway 2 km (1 mi) 2022

Approved

Name State Highway(s) Type Length Expected opening
Manawatū Tararua Highway SH 3 Expressway 12 km (7 mi) 2024
Tauranga Northern Link SH 2 Expressway 7 km (4 mi) late 2025
Omokoroa to Te Puna SH 2 Expressway 7 km (4 mi) late 2027
Whangarei to Marsden Point SH 1 Expressway 22 km (14 mi) 2027-2028
Kapiti Expressway (Otaki to north of Levin) SH 1 Expressway 24 km (15 mi) 2029

Auckland

Northern Motorway (SH 1)

From the Central Motorway Junction in downtown Auckland via the Auckland Harbour Bridge and the North Shore to Puhoi, Construction of the next section to just north of Warkworth has commenced in 2017.

Northwestern Motorway (SH 16)

From Auckland port to Brigham Creek Rd, Whenuapai.

Southwestern Motorway (SH 20)

From the Southern Motorway in Manukau City to Northwestern Motorway.

Southern Motorway (SH 1)

From downtown Auckland via Manukau City to the Bombay Hills and the Waikato Expressway.

Upper Harbour Motorway (SH 18)

Connecting the Northwestern and Northern Motorways via the Upper Harbour Crossing. Construction of the connector between the Northern and Upper Harbour Motorways will commence in 2018.

Waikato

Waikato Expressway (SH 1)

A mostly-constructed expressway between the Southern Motorway at Bombay and Cambridge, complete between the Southern Motorway and Rotokauri, Tamahere and Cambridge. By 2007 SH 1 between Longswamp and Rangiriri was three lanes with a median barrier. In 2012 the Te Rapa Spur was opened, followed by the Ngāruawāhia section in 2013. The Cambridge bypass opened on 16 December 2015, six months ahead of schedule. The route has now been fully designated, and funding was secured for the Huntly and Hamilton sections. The Huntly section opened in March 2020, but the Hamilton section was delayed due to the 2020 coronavirus outbreak. The 15 km Cambridge Section now has a 110kmph speed limit for light vehicles as of 11 December 2017.

Bay of Plenty

Takitimu Drive (Pyes Pa - Mount Maunganui Expressway) (SH 2/SH 29)

From Pyes Pa to Chapel Street near the city centre. An interchange exists with Tamatea Arikinui Drive, along with a "coat-hanger" interchange, which is used with Elizabeth Street and heads north towards Mt Maunganui. The section from Pyes Pa to the SH 2 interchange is tolled. From 1 August 2015 it was added to the New Zealand state highway network as part of SH 29.[4]

Tamatea Arikinui Drive (Bethlehem - The Avenues Expressway) (SH 2)

From 15th Avenue to just before Bethlehem Town Centre, with interchanges at Cambridge Road, Waihi Road and Takitimu Drive (Pyes Pa - City Expressway).

Connects Tauranga to Paengaroa (with SH 33) via Papamoa, bypassing Te Puke. In late 2006 the first phase was opened from Maungatapu to Bayfair. Full motorway was completed in 2015 with the tolled section between Papamoa and Paengaroa opened to the public in August that year. The tolled section from Papamoa to Paengaroa now has speed limit for light vehicles of 110 kmph as of 11 December 2017

Hawke's Bay

Hawke's Bay Expressway (SH 2)

From SH 2 at Hawke's Bay Airport to SH 2 at Pakipaki, south of Hastings.

Wellington

Johnsonville-Porirua Motorway (SH 1)

Approximately 11 km (6.8 mi) in length, this was New Zealand's first motorway. The first section opened in 1950.

Wellington Urban Motorway (SH 1)

From Ngauranga to Te Aro, 7 km (4.3 mi)

Kapiti Expressway (SH 1)

The Kapiti Expressway is an under-construction four-lane grade-separated expressway, stretching 33 km (21 mi) from Mackays Crossing north of Paekakariki to just north of Ōtaki on the Kapiti Coast. When completed, it will bypass the existing two-lane State Highway 1 through Raumati, Paraparaumu, Waikanae and Ōtaki. The section from Mackays Crossing to south of Raumati was completed in 2007 with the grade separation of the Mackays railway level crossing. Work on the Raumati to Peka Peka started in December 2013[5] and opened on 24 February 2017,[6] with minor finishing works completed by July. Construction of the section from Peka Peka north to Ōtaki commenced in late 2017 and is expected to be completed in 2020.

Transmission Gully Motorway (SH 1)

Under construction, from Mackays Crossing near Paraparaumu to the Johnsonville-Porirua Motorway, bypassing Centennial Highway.

Hutt Expressway (Hutt Road, Western Hutt Road, River Road) (SH 2)

From the Wellington Urban Motorway at Ngauranga through the Hutt Valley to the Fergusson Drive intersection at Maoribank in northern Upper Hutt. It has three names: Hutt Road from Ngauranga to Petone, Western Hutt Road from Petone to Silverstream, and River Road from Silverstream to Maoribank. 30 km (19 mi).

The section south of Melling is dual carriage and is fully grade separated. The section from Melling north to Silverstream is dual carriage with a mixture of at-grade and grade separated intersections. The section north of Silverstream is a 2+1 road with at grade intersections.

Canterbury

Christchurch Northern Motorway (SH 1)

From north of Kaiapoi over the Waimakariri River through to the northern suburb of Belfast. Its southernmost interchange (Kainga/Marshland) is unusual in that northbound traffic merges from the right, while southbound traffic is carried on a large loop to the right up and over the onramp. The reason for this design was to accommodate a future southern extension into central Christchurch, with the northbound onramp being the first part of the northbound carriageway. Northbound there are three more interchanges; Tram Road (Oxford), north off, south on; Kaiapoi (diamond interchange); and Lineside Road (SH 71 to Rangiora), north off, south on. It is dual carriageway from Belfast (Main North Road) to Lineside Road, single lane each way with no median strip to Woodend.

Christchurch Southern Motorway (SH 76)

Short motorway bypassing a part of southern Christchurch city. Lost its status as a motorway after plans to extend the original section (between Curletts Road and Barrington Street, which was built in the early 1980s) stalled. Since 2012, the road has been extended from Curletts Road to Halswell Junction Road with the original section widened to four lanes and interchanges at both Curletts Road and Barrington Street), thereby regaining motorway status.

Christchurch-Lyttelton Motorway (SH 74)

From the intersection of Ferry and Dyers Roads along Tunnel Road through the Lyttelton Tunnel to the intersection of Norwich Quay and Simeon Quay. It is single lane with interchanges at Bridle Path and Port Hills Road. There is a passing lane southbound from the Port Hills Road interchange.

Western Belfast Bypass (SH 1)

Otago

Former Dunedin Northern Motorway (SH 1)

This undivided highway had its "motorway" signs removed several years ago, and is now called Dunedin-Waitati Highway.

From Pine Hill to Waitati; the main route north from Dunedin.

Caversham Bypass (SH 1)

From Dunedin CBD to Caversham, has been widened to four-lane over its full length.[7]

Dunedin Southern Motorway (SH 1)

From Lookout Point at the southwestern end of Caversham past the outer suburbs of Green Island, Abbotsford and Fairfield to the intersection with SH 87 at Mosgiel. It is one of the southernmost motorways in the world. The length of the motorway is only 13 km.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Manual of Traffic Signs and Markings (MOTSAM) Part 3: Motorways and Expressways". NZ Transport Agency. June 2009. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  2. ^ "State highway frequently asked questions". NZ Transport Agency. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  3. ^ "§82: Restrictions on use of motorways". Transit New Zealand Act 1989. New Zealand Legislation. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  4. ^ "Tolls and fees". NZTA. Retrieved 26 January 2016.
  5. ^ "Work starts on MacKays to Peka Peka expressway". Fairfax New Zealand (via Stuff.co.nz). 2 December 2013. Retrieved 28 December 2014.
  6. ^ "Traffic finally flows on to $630m Kapiti Expressway as road quietly opens". Stuff. Retrieved 2 March 2017.
  7. ^ Oldham, Stu (19 January 2011). "Work starts on multimillion-dollar upgrade". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 15 October 2011.