crawf wrote:The Port & Grange Rd tunnel should be made longer than 1km.
rhino wrote:Whether this gets built next or not, I don't know - if the Sturt Road underpass is cheaper, as I suspect it will be, they may build that first due to the economic circumstances of the times. However, it would not surprise me if there is no tunnel as such under Grange Road, Port Road, and the train line, but rather a series of underpasses, South Road remaining at the lower level from one end of the series to the other, but not completely covered over to form a tunnel. Grange Road, Port Road and the rail line would cross on bridge decks, similar to the Bakewell Underpass.
What would be the advantage of a cut-and-cover tunnel? Maybe the top of it could be used instead of slip lanes to access the roads crossing over?
More to the point, was a tunnel ever part of the official proposal?
ricecrackers wrote:
i would've thought the Sturt Road underpass would be of a higher priority as at least that will assist Southern suburbs traffic getting to the CBD quicker....... as all the underpasses are pointless until there is a long stretch of unimpeded driving, as otherwise the bottlenecks will just be moved further up the road.
That's actually not true, because the new bottlenecks won't be as narrow as the old ones. The benefits would be limited, but that doesn't make them pointless.
i assume this could all be calculated quite easily using some kind of graphical software that simulates traffic flows after a change to an intersection is made. with the amount of money these types of road projects cost, the least they could do would be to invest in that type of technology at the very least to enable prioritization of these projects.
They already do.
the other one, which no one has talked about is the Daws Road intersection, one to watch as South Road use increases after each project.
Good point, but I don't think Daws Road carries all that much traffic - though maybe that will change after it's aligned with Springbank Road.
AtD wrote:ricecrackers wrote:assist Southern suburbs traffic getting to the CBD quicker
Take a bloody train.
Unfortunately the trains serve too small a part of the Southern suburbs, and don't serve the CBD very well either. For many commuters it's quicker to catch a bus, and most of the buses go via South Road.