[U/C] Re: M2 North-South Motorway
Posted: Sat Aug 01, 2020 8:59 pm
when did the speed limit in the trench at Darlington change to 80? is it north bound only or is the limit 80 south bound as well?
Adelaide's Premier Development and Construction Site
https://mail.sensational-adelaide.com/forum/
https://mail.sensational-adelaide.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3172
Today, according to its Facebook post.
All new lanes in the Darlington Upgrade Project lowered motorway are open and the speed limit has been lifted to 80km/h between the Southern Expressway and Ayliffes Road.
A partial closure of the lowered motorway will be required in late 2020, for the final asphalt wearing course. Advance notice of this closure will be provided closer to the date.
Some minor finishing works will also be required over the coming months across the project site including landscaping, wayfinding, public art and remediation of the site compound, and signage and speed restrictions will be in place where required during these times. Other road closures and traffic restrictions may be required and advance notice will be provided.
Are you actually suggesting that a major thoroughfare like South Road, even during re-construction, should have on road bus stops and that other traffic should wait for buses?1NEEDS2POST wrote: ↑Sat Aug 01, 2020 11:20 pmIt's much slower for buses to have to merge with traffic. Cars can wait while buses pick up and drop off passengers.
I would prefer indented, partly for aesthetics, but northbound, it really doesn't matter at all, as the cars and truck will be waiting, whether it is behind a bus or at the Regency Road traffic lights. Southbound similarly for Torrens Road and Pym Street except maybe for the middle stop.rev wrote: ↑Sun Aug 02, 2020 12:16 amAre you actually suggesting that a major thoroughfare like South Road, even during re-construction, should have on road bus stops and that other traffic should wait for buses?1NEEDS2POST wrote: ↑Sat Aug 01, 2020 11:20 pmIt's much slower for buses to have to merge with traffic. Cars can wait while buses pick up and drop off passengers.
I don't get this line of thought from people, same with cyclists who think everyone else should wait for them, when the alternative is to actually create infrastructure that accommodates all users with little to no impediment on other users. What's so hard or wrong with that?
Buses have right of way, as per the sign on the back window. Other vehicles have to give way when a bus is merging back in after dropping off/picking up passengers.
What you suggest will lead to more congestion even if it is only temporary.
I mean it's all going to be temporary until the final alignment is finished anyway, unless the side roads (the bits that will be "south road) will be opened first which I assume is what's going to happen while they build the overpass and motorway through the middle.SBD wrote: ↑Sun Aug 02, 2020 11:41 amI would prefer indented, partly for aesthetics, but northbound, it really doesn't matter at all, as the cars and truck will be waiting, whether it is behind a bus or at the Regency Road traffic lights. Southbound similarly for Torrens Road and Pym Street except maybe for the middle stop.rev wrote: ↑Sun Aug 02, 2020 12:16 amAre you actually suggesting that a major thoroughfare like South Road, even during re-construction, should have on road bus stops and that other traffic should wait for buses?1NEEDS2POST wrote: ↑Sat Aug 01, 2020 11:20 pm
It's much slower for buses to have to merge with traffic. Cars can wait while buses pick up and drop off passengers.
I don't get this line of thought from people, same with cyclists who think everyone else should wait for them, when the alternative is to actually create infrastructure that accommodates all users with little to no impediment on other users. What's so hard or wrong with that?
Buses have right of way, as per the sign on the back window. Other vehicles have to give way when a bus is merging back in after dropping off/picking up passengers.
What you suggest will lead to more congestion even if it is only temporary.
It looks like the first traffic switches might be to move to the final alignments away from Regency Road on both sides - southbound south of Regency Road (not sure how far) and Northbound north of it. Northbound towards Regency Road looks like it might then temporarily move over to the present southbound carriageway while the northbound section is completely rebuilt as it is pretty terrible at present.rev wrote: ↑Sun Aug 02, 2020 1:05 pmI mean it's all going to be temporary until the final alignment is finished anyway, unless the side roads (the bits that will be "south road) will be opened first which I assume is what's going to happen while they build the overpass and motorway through the middle.SBD wrote: ↑Sun Aug 02, 2020 11:41 amI would prefer indented, partly for aesthetics, but northbound, it really doesn't matter at all, as the cars and truck will be waiting, whether it is behind a bus or at the Regency Road traffic lights. Southbound similarly for Torrens Road and Pym Street except maybe for the middle stop.rev wrote: ↑Sun Aug 02, 2020 12:16 am
Are you actually suggesting that a major thoroughfare like South Road, even during re-construction, should have on road bus stops and that other traffic should wait for buses?
I don't get this line of thought from people, same with cyclists who think everyone else should wait for them, when the alternative is to actually create infrastructure that accommodates all users with little to no impediment on other users. What's so hard or wrong with that?
Buses have right of way, as per the sign on the back window. Other vehicles have to give way when a bus is merging back in after dropping off/picking up passengers.
What you suggest will lead to more congestion even if it is only temporary.
Anyway, looking at the next section. The entire remaining section to be done runs about 11km. One industry group claimed it was going to cost $11 billion to do a tunnel for the entire length.
Over in Sydney the NorthConnex tunnel which runs 9km through suburban Sydney, has a cost of $3 billion.
In two and a half years they've dug out 21km of tunnel, according to a factsheet from the project website. I assume that 21km means both directions and at motorway standard or whatever.
Major work started in mid 2015.
It's due to open this year, delayed by a year because they had issues with construction due to the 90m depth.
For further reference, what the suggested exaggerated cost of $11 billion by that industry group could get you is the original WestConnex, which is 33km in length and mostly underground (about 26km of it) although the cost of that has nearly doubled now.
I don't see why a 10-11 km tunnel at motorway standard couldn't be built here for between 3-5 billion (inflation and whatever) within a 5-7 year time frame.
Throw in a few hundred million to upgrade the improve the surface road.
Don't we have like $5 billion already on the table committed for the remaining section?
They want to stimulate the economy especially during this pandemic induced recession. Well here you go, perfect opportunity and perfect project for it. 5~+ years of construction, thousands of jobs.
Wasn't that caused by some pipe that someone forgot about?claybro wrote: ↑Sun Aug 02, 2020 11:52 pma short shallow 20 second earthquake in Adelaide in the 1950's caused millions of dollars damage and levelled several buildings around Darlington. One would hope any long tunnel would take this into account, but given contractors did not even account for groundwater in the Darlington trench, leading to a section I'd the retaining wall collapsing, sorry, but I don't put much faith in their expertise for such a massive undertaking.
Auditor General's reportrev wrote: ↑Mon Aug 03, 2020 9:52 amWasn't that caused by some pipe that someone forgot about?claybro wrote: ↑Sun Aug 02, 2020 11:52 pma short shallow 20 second earthquake in Adelaide in the 1950's caused millions of dollars damage and levelled several buildings around Darlington. One would hope any long tunnel would take this into account, but given contractors did not even account for groundwater in the Darlington trench, leading to a section I'd the retaining wall collapsing, sorry, but I don't put much faith in their expertise for such a massive undertaking.
The water on the surface (harbour/river etc) is not necessarily connected to the water table underneath it.rev wrote: ↑Mon Aug 03, 2020 12:58 pmHow come there's a potential issue with the water table here, but they can build a tunnel under Sydney Harbour?
How come the Legacy Way tunnel in Brisbane under the suburbs and not far from the Brisbane River was able to be built with out the water table being an issue? That's a significant body of water that has flooded before. Or the M7 which goes under the Brisbane River..
Melbourne's Burnley tunnels run under/crosses the Yarra, and one of the entry's is like 80m from the Yarra it self.
We don't have technology that can circumvent any potential problems with water?
How are skyscrapers built along waterfronts but apparently the water table here will be a problem for a tunnel?
I'm not an expert so I don't know if any of the building methods or technologies available would be suitable, but surely Adelaide isn't the only place where the water table has presented a challenge? Is it a cost thing? At this time with the country being in a recession, the federal government will be looking to spend their way out of it with infrastructure projects. We should push for more funding for this project.
If it is a technology thing, why not over come it? Civilizations weren't built by people throwing their hands up and saying too hard, they were built by people striving for excellence by over coming challenges.
If a local or national engineering firm can solve whatever issue there is, and it hasn't been done before, then yes, absolutely it is worth it. For several reasons, not least of which financially. There would be other places around the world which probably have similar circumstances. Imagine a local Adelaide firm going global and doing that engineering work around the world. Think of it this way, there's very few companies from even fewer countries that can do deep sea drilling and oil/gas extraction.