The Southland App
The Southland App
Advocate Communications
Get it on the Apple StoreGet it on the Google Play Store
Listen to...WINShop LocalNotices | JobsContact
The Southland App

Stead St reopens to 2 lanes on 6 May

The Southland App

29 April 2022, 11:36 PM

Stead St reopens to 2 lanes on 6 May

The main arterial road linking Otatara to Invercargill city is to reopen to two lanes next week.


Stead Street was reduced to one lane, one-way traffic in November 2021 to allow the installation of a sheet pile wall along the stopbank, as part of a key climate resilience project.


Invercargill City Council (ICC) Manager Engineering Services Jeremy Rees said he was pleased to be able to confirm the road would reopen to two-way, 30kmh traffic from Friday 6 May.


“An exact time for the road reopening would be determined on the day as the crews work to clear the way, so Otatara residents can prepare to access the city via Stead St from Friday afternoon.”



ICC has been upgrading both the Stead St and Cobbe Rd stopbanks with a sheet pile wall and earthen embankment to protect the city, the Invercargill Airport and critical infrastructure from extreme weather events, sea level rise and further effects of climate change.


“The Stead St Stopbank Upgrade has been a major piece of infrastructure that paves the way for Murihiku to become a climate-resilient city of the future,” he said.


“We are pleased to be making progress on this significant project, including the completion of the sheet pile wall, which was completed ahead of time and budget, and allowed us to undertake some extra drainage work.”


Landscaping, planting and footpath works will continue in the coming months, meaning the current temporary pedestrian and cycle path arrangement will remain in place while work continues on the upgraded stopbank cycleway, he said.



Works are due to finish up in July.


The ICC is investing $4.7 million in the project with additional funding of $10.8m from Kānoa – the Regional Economic Development and Investment Unit, as part of a wider focus on the region’s flood protection and river management schemes, with support for several ‘shovel-ready’ projects in Southland announced in 2020.


Earlier this month the projects contractors, subcontractors and staff decided to set aside some time to help clean up the estuary and clear rubbish that had accumulated in the space.


“We understand the importance of the estuary to mana whenua and to kaitiakitaka, and so our teams wanted to put in some effort to tidy up and honour the area,” Mr Rees said.


For more information, visit icc.govt.nz/steadstreet.




The Southland App
The Southland App
Advocate Communications

Get it on the Apple StoreGet it on the Google Play Store