Roads agency set to release at least five N2, N3 tenders

12th July 2019

By: Shirley le Guern

Creamer Media Correspondent

     

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At least five tenders for the upgrade of the N3 and N2 highways, in KwaZulu-Natal, would go out before the end of the South African National Road Agency Limited’s (Sanral’s) current financial year, Sanral Eastern Region design, planning and construction manager Ravi Ronny told a business briefing roadshow in Durban in late June.

Owing

to the length of time required for both upgrades and the estimated R30-billion cost, the corridor has been split into several detailed design and construction packages, each valued at about R1-billion.

The upgrade of the 80-km-long N3 corridor between Durban and Pietermaritzburg accounts for 14 packages and the 55 km stretch of the N2 between Isipingo and the Dube TradePort, at the King Shaka International Airport, comprises ten individual packages.

The largest upgrade – for the EB Cloete, or Spaghetti Junction, interchange, which links the N2 and the N3 – is valued at more than R2-billion and will be one of the first tenders to go out this year.

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his segment of the road, which was plagued by both bottlenecks and congestion, will be upgraded into a free-flow interchange.

This project, which is likely to be a lengthy one, will impact on both the N3 and N2 corridors and negotiations are currently under way with both provincial and local authorities to identify alternative routes.

These megaprojects, which form part of government’s key strategic integrated projects, in this case SIP 2: Durban–Free State–Gauteng Corridor, have taken ten years to plan.

Completion of the N3 upgrade, in particular, is imperative, as it links South Africa’s largest port with Gauteng and neighbouring States. It will provide for the expected increase of 600 000 containers through the port, which will require an additional 400 000 road trips.

Already, a minimum of 45 000 vehicles use this road every day. During busy periods, traffic volumes can peak at 130 000 vehicles a day.

More than 75-million tons of freight a year is transported along the N3 corridor.

Closure of the N3 costs the economy up to R300 000 an hour, and Ronny said failure to upgrade the N3 corridor not only between Durban and Pietermaritzburg but also all the way to inland ports in Gauteng could eventually cost th fiscus R1-billion a year.

Should this upgrade not go ahead, road users alone will lose up to R800-million a year owing to accidents and time delays.

The N2 corridor is also becoming increasingly important, as the Dube TradePort continues to attract high-profile investors and air freight volumes increase.

The upgrades will include the widening of the carriageways by four or five lanes in each direction and the reconfiguration of most interchanges along these routes. Widening will be accommodated as far as possible within the existing median and road reserve.

The project will also result in the modification of existing bridges, crossroads and drainage, the construction of new infrastructure and the demolition of redundant structures.

In addition to the EB Cloete interchange upgrade, other key interchanges that will be upgraded along the N3 will include the Westville Paradise Valley Viaduct, which will ultimately include the first-ever network arch bridge to be built in South Africa, as well as the upgrading of road infrastructure at Key Ridge and Cato Ridge, where Transnet National Ports Authority is considering the construction of an inland port that will help alleviate massive road congestion into and out of the Durban harbour.

The N2 upgrade will see the complete reconfiguration of the aged Higginson Highway interchange, which links the main M7 route out of the harbour with the N2 and, ultimately, the N3 towards Gauteng.

This project comprises a multilevel interchange, including fly-over directional ramps, as well as loops to allow high mobility. In future, this interchange will carry most of the traffic from the proposed Durban Dig Out Port.

Ronny said the upgrade of the two corridors was expected to create 15 000 to 20 000 jobs and would be phased in as individual projects began.

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he first tenders would be awarded before year-end.

Edited by Martin Zhuwakinyu
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

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