50th anniversary of opening of SH25A Kopu-Hikuai Road
22 March 2017 | BAY OF PLENTY
The tawa arch was a landmark
feature on the Kopu-Hikuai Road until it was re-routed away
from the structure
50th anniversary of opening of SH25A Kopu-Hikuai Road
This week marks a
significant milestone in the history of one of Coromandel
Peninsula’s key access routes.
On a very wet day
50 years ago a ceremony was held to open 29 kilometres of
state highway that connects the towns of Tairua and Hikuai
and provides a route between Thames and the peninsula’s
east coast.
“The opening of the highway known as
State Highway 25A or the Kopu-Hikuai Road on Thursday 23
March 1967, changed the lives of those travelling across the
Peninsula,” says Niclas Johansson the Transport Agency’s
Highway Manager.
“Routes like this, which provide
access between what would have otherwise been isolated
townships, are a key driver in helping shape growth and
development and opening up access to jobs, education and
services.”
The towns of Tairua and Hikuai were
founded on gold, kauri timber and gum and the origins of the
state highway start as a foot track which was later used by
gold prospectors, gum diggers and bush
fellers.
During the 1800s the bush was dense and
the only route between the two towns was a narrow dirt track
that crossed swampland and steep hills.
By the
early 1900s it would take a four-horse wagon laden with
cargo five hours to travel between Hikuai and Broken Hill
mine.
By the 1930s the track was used regularly and
received its first coat of metal. But flooding and slips
were a problem and school children chose to get to school on
horseback rather than use the road which was thick with
mud.
As soldiers returned from the war in the 1940s
they settled on farms in Hikuai and the population of the
area grew. Settlers needed better access to services such as
the hospital in Thames.
Locals wanted better and in
1958 work began on a route up the Kirikiri Stream
Valley.
It started at the Hikuai end and was
followed by construction on the Kopu end in
1960.
Construction workers grappled with soil that
was challenging to build on, tricky access on steep slopes
and dense bush along with heavy rainfall which created slips
and mudslides.
Millions of tonnes of earth were
moved and by the time it was finished in 1967 the highway
included seven bridges and had cost more than a million
pounds to build.
Eventually in 1973, the road was
sealed and to this day continues to make travel through this
part of the region a world away from the dirt track it
started
as.