Waka Kotahi is being accused of being too risk-averse after closing the Auckland Harbour Bridge on five occasions on Saturday.
The transport agency lowered its threshold for closing all lanes of the bridge after it was damaged by a听, and Devonport-Takapuna local board member George Wood believes it is now over-reacting.
Concerned about the 鈥渕ayhem鈥 caused by repeated closures, he wants Waka Kotahi to review its procedures for closing the bridge or look at alternative solutions.
鈥淚t seems ever since that truck hit the bridge they鈥檝e got the jitters and they鈥檙e so risk averse that I think their reasoning and the way they do it needs to be looked at,鈥 he told the听Herald.
One of his suggestions was more precise, to-the-minute forecasting - but meteorologists said this had previously proven complex and costly.
Wood, a former councillor, said the successive closures on Saturday, when wind gusts reached 91km/h, were frustrating.
鈥淚t seems that it shuts and then a short time later it opens again. So have they got better systems they could put in place to actually monitor the gusts?鈥
Former Auckland councillor George Wood wants Waka Kotahi's procedures for closing the bridge to be reviewed. Photo / Dean Purcell
Waka Kotahi maintainence and operations manager for Auckland and Northland Jacqui Hori-Hoult said the agency鈥檚 priority was public safety and the bridge structure, and it did not take the decision to close the bridge lightly.
All lanes were closed when wind gusts exceeded 90km/h. The direction of the wind was also taken into account, and there were different limits for headwinds or crosswinds.
Waka Kotahi noted the role of climate change and its effects on the transport network.
鈥淲hile the overall annual rainfall total has not increased by much, the intensity has, resulting in much higher numbers of short, sharp intense rainfall and high wind gusts affecting the Auckland Harbour Bridge,鈥 Hort-Hoult said.
Wood said he accepted that changing climate patterns played a role in more frequent closures of the bridge in the past few years but felt that there needed to be a pragmatic solution than constant closures.
The truck crash in September 2020 was caused by a 127km/h gust of wind. It led to the closure of some of the bridge lanes for more than two weeks while repairs took place.
Before the incident, all lanes of the bridge were closed听听and the oblique wind speed was exceeding 120km/h. Those thresholds were lowered to 90km/h and 105km/h respectively in October 2020.
While Wood was seeking more sensitive modelling of high winds, previous experience has shown this can be difficult.
National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (Niwa) scientists were coincidentally听听for Emirates Team New Zealand in the Hauraki Gulf at the time of the truck crash.
They found that while they could accurately predict the time and direction of the wind around the bridge, they underestimated the most extreme wind gusts.
The bridge鈥檚 structure caused the wind to speed up at road level, with gusts and mean speeds 10 to 15 per cent higher on the road surface compared to the forecast peak gusts.
Meteorologist Dr Richard Turner, who worked on the modelling, said he sympathised with the transport officials who were responsible for making decisions about closing the bridge.
鈥淚t is tricky. They have to think about safety first and foremost and I couldn鈥檛 imagine they would do it lightly.鈥
Niwa鈥檚 modelling showed it was possible to do highly specific forecasting of a structure but also that it would be 鈥渉ideously expensive鈥 to run because of the computer power required, Dr Turner said.
Another suggestion has been building wind breaks onto the harbour bridge - though that has not been seriously considered by Waka Kotahi and is believed to raise a number of engineering problems.
Niwa noted overseas scientists have been investigating what models of vehicle are most likely to overturn in particular weather conditions, and this research could help inform procedures for the bridge in future.
WHEN IS THE BRIDGE CLOSED?
Before October 2020:
Wind speed (perpendicular): 100-110km/h average
Wind speed (oblique): 120km+
After October 2020:
Wind speed (perpendicular): 90km/h
Wind speed (oblique): 105km/h
听
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