Pukete Bridge

Pukete Bridge
South side of bridge from River Rd, with acoustic barrier of blue and yellow plastic panels, in 2015
Coordinates37°44′35″S 175°15′14″E / 37.743°S 175.254°E / -37.743; 175.254
CarriesMotor vehicles
CrossesWaikato River
OwnerHamilton City Council
Preceded byFairfield Bridge
Followed byPukete sewer bridge
Characteristics
Total length158 metres (518 ft)
Longest span75 metres (246 ft)[1]
History
Construction startJanuary 1985
Construction endOctober 1996
Statistics
Daily traffic2004 22,247
2005 24,000
2006 25,200
2007 26,400
2008 26,300
2009 27,200
2010 28,100
2011 26,900
2012 25,300
2013 26,400
2014 33,000
Eastbound Westbound
2015 12,900 12,900
2016 15,600 15,400
2017 17,600 18,700
2018 18,600 19,800
2019 14,600 21,700
2020 12,800 21,200
2021 10,400 11,200
2022 16,900 18,500[2]
Location
Map

Pukete Bridge is a concrete box girder bridge in Hamilton, New Zealand, spanning the Waikato River. The bridge connects the western and eastern stretches of Wairere Drive.

In February 2011 an upgrade began including expand the number of lanes from two to four. It was originally expected to be completed in late 2013,[3] but was finished in May 2013.[4] During the early part of 2011 thousands of tonnes of earth were removed by truck and taken 3 km to build up 2 large earth ramps as part of the New Zealand State Highway 1 bypass at Horotiu. As the original road had been built largely in a gully, this included the removal of trees and other vegetation planted on the gully sides to block traffic noise.

The existing cycle lane will be incorporated in the new roadway and a new three-metre-wide cycle and pedestrian clip-on added on the southern side of the bridge. By Easter 2013 4 laning was complete. The cycle lane has acoustic barrier of blue and yellow plastic panels which prevent views of the river from vehicles on the south side. The yellow panels signify the kowhai trees lining the banks of the river, and the blue panels represent the water and sky.[5] The north side of the bridge has been lined with crash barriers to prevent cars crashing into the river after an accident. A driver was killed in 2012 after her 4-wheel drive went out of control and plunged through the barrier into the river.[6]

Traffic at Pukete Bridge in 2006 was 25,200 vehicles a day.[7] In 2018 it was 38,400.[8]

  1. ^ "Pukete Bridge" (PDF). BBR Contech. October 2002. Retrieved 23 September 2010.
  2. ^ "Hamilton City Traffic Counts". data-waikatolass.opendata.arcgis.com. Retrieved 15 December 2023.
  3. ^ Preston, Nikki (24 July 2010). "Ring road expansion planned". Waikato Times. Fairfax New Zealand. Archived from the original on 25 July 2010. Retrieved 23 September 2010.
  4. ^ "Wairere Drive 4-laning". Hamilton City Council. May 2013. Retrieved 18 September 2013.
  5. ^ Leaman, Aaron (21 February 2013). "Pukete Bridge clip-on lane opens". Stuff. Retrieved 19 April 2017.
  6. ^ Leaman, Aaron (30 August 2012). "Bridge death not down to roadworks: Labour dept". Stuff. Retrieved 16 June 2017.
  7. ^ "Traffic Counting Data" (PDF). Hamilton City Council.
  8. ^ "2018 Traffic Flow Map" (PDF). Hamilton City Council.