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    city rail link

    Explore " city rail link" with insightful episodes like "Simon Bridges: Auckland Business Chamber CEO on City Rail Link costing taxpayers millions more amid increased costs and delays", "Simon Bridges: Auckland Business Chamber CEO on City Rail Link costing taxpayers millions more amid increased costs and delays", "Christine Fletcher: Auckland City Councillor on AT warning that rail crossings could be closed for 45 minutes each hour during peak commute times", "Sean Sweeney: CRL chief on Auckland’s City Rail Link not opening until 2026 at the earliest" and "Jordan Williams: Taxpayer's Union Executive Director says Auckland Transport is focusing on the wrong things" from podcasts like ""Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive", "Best of Business", "Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive", "Best of Business" and "Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive"" and more!

    Episodes (6)

    Simon Bridges: Auckland Business Chamber CEO on City Rail Link costing taxpayers millions more amid increased costs and delays

    Simon Bridges: Auckland Business Chamber CEO on City Rail Link costing taxpayers millions more amid increased costs and delays

    Auckland ratepayers will be saddled with a bill of roughly $220 million each year to run the City Rail Link - once it opens.

    Chief executive Sean Sweeney says the project is 80 percent complete, but there's no guarantee the November 2025 deadline will be met.

    Auckland Business Chamber CEO Simon Bridges says there's no excuse for these extended cost blowouts and delays.

    "It's created a huge amount of problems. Just by the cost blowouts, the fact that this has taken too long and there doesn't seem to be a particularly good end in sight."

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    Simon Bridges: Auckland Business Chamber CEO on City Rail Link costing taxpayers millions more amid increased costs and delays

    Simon Bridges: Auckland Business Chamber CEO on City Rail Link costing taxpayers millions more amid increased costs and delays

    Auckland ratepayers will be saddled with a bill of roughly $220 million each year to run the City Rail Link - once it opens.

    Chief executive Sean Sweeney says the project is 80 percent complete, but there's no guarantee the November 2025 deadline will be met.

    Auckland Business Chamber CEO Simon Bridges says there's no excuse for these extended cost blowouts and delays.

    "It's created a huge amount of problems. Just by the cost blowouts, the fact that this has taken too long and there doesn't seem to be a particularly good end in sight."

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    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Christine Fletcher: Auckland City Councillor on AT warning that rail crossings could be closed for 45 minutes each hour during peak commute times

    Christine Fletcher: Auckland City Councillor on AT warning that rail crossings could be closed for 45 minutes each hour during peak commute times

    Increased train frequency in Auckland's Mt Albert could mean crossings will close for 45 minutes each hour during peak times.

    That's on top of Auckland Transport's plans to put barrier arms and flashing lights on all city rail crossings over coming decades.

    Many need to be done before the City Rail Link is completed, scheduled for 2025.

    Auckland City Councillor Christine Fletcher says it's not good enough.

    "The CRL will not work unless we invest in comprehensive-grade separation, because every 10-15 minutes, these trains are going to be coming along, and you're going to have the barriers down."

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    Sean Sweeney: CRL chief on Auckland’s City Rail Link not opening until 2026 at the earliest

    Sean Sweeney: CRL chief on Auckland’s City Rail Link not opening until 2026 at the earliest

    Auckland’s $5.5 billion City Rail Link (CRL) will not open until sometime in 2026 or later, the Herald can reveal.

    This is at least 18 months longer than what was forecasted only a few months ago when the cost of the project blew out by $1.1b to $5.5b and the completion date moved from late 2024 to November 2025.

    In an exclusive interview during a tour of the mega-project, City Rail Link chief executive Dr Sean Sweeney said the latest completion date is not when Aucklanders will get to ride the underground railway.

    He said November 2025 is when City Rail Link Ltd hands over the brand spanking new 3.4-kilometre track from Britomart to Mt Eden to Auckland Transport and KiwiRail, which then have to do extensive testing before it opens to passengers.

    Sweeney was reluctant to say how long that could be, but when pressed said: “As a ballpark guess, I’d say six months, but people need to understand that numbers could change a lot, based on what happens.”

    The big issue vexing the minds of Sweeney and the Alliance contractor is moving from the construction of the tunnels and stations to the complex and risky phase of installing bespoke software and signalling work, and plugging a state-of-the-art railway into the existing, fault-ridden network.

    Three years ago, Sweeney told the Herald there are going to be challenges at the “back end”, and the problem is made worse because a metro rail system has never been built in New Zealand.

    At the time, he was commenting on the Crossrail line under London that encountered massive and costly overruns after back-end problems just as everyone was doing victory laps - the chairman got a knighthood and later got sacked.

    Sweeney said Crossrail was a much more complex project and does not envisage similar problems with the CRL, but did acknowledge plugging new plants and equipment into the existing rail network could lead to “unintended consequences”.

    Full testing of the new systems is expected to begin in mid-2024 and will take about a year, said Sweeney, who is planning to finish the job before the November 2025 date.

    One of the biggest issues that needs testing, he said, is a fire on a train in the tunnel.

    After the handover, AT and KiwiRail have to go through another set of tests, which Sweeney said is not straightforward and involves a lot of operational and training exercises.

    “There are exhaustive tests that they will have to go through, and safety checks, before they are allowed to run passengers,” Sweeney said.

    For example, every one of the 240 drivers in Auckland will have to go through the tunnels for training.

    An AT spokeswoman could not say when trains will start running on the CRL, saying it is working with CRL Ltd and the Alliance contractor, Auckland One Rail, the rail safety regular Waka Kotahi New Zealand Transport Agency and other stakeholders on a plan to begin as early as possible.

    The plan involved critical testing of the new systems before trains can operate, including emergency and evacuation protocols, driver training, signalling and other important systems needed to operate the CRL safely.

    “We will be able to confirm the dates for CRL operations once this programme is complete,” she said.

    Artist's impression of what the Karanga-a-Hape station will look like once it opens. Photo / Supplied

    Auckland Chamber of Commerce chief executive Simon Bridges, who was Minister of Transport when work started on the CRL in 2016, said a 2026 opening date is far too long.

    “While most big infrastructure projects do take longer than is said when they start, a critical mistake here was not continuing during Covid lockdowns, when in hindsight we could have, if anything, picked up the pace in a safe and appropriate way.

     “That said, when it does open, my pick is that the vast majority of people will forget all the criticism, and Auckland will be in for a pretty golden period given the upgraded transport link, a new convention centre, and hopefully, an upward swing in cyclical economic activity,” said the former MP for Tauranga, who’s now a resident of and cheerleader for the Super City.

    Bridges said the long wait to get to the finish line is little comfort to businesses disrupted - and in some cases, devastated - by the construction works.

    “But in a wider Auckland sense, it will be exciting when it eventually opens,” he said.

    Auckland Business Chamber chief executive Simon Bridges and Heart of the City chief executive Viv Beck are disappointed about the time it is taking to build the CRL. Photo / Brett Phibbs

    Heart of the City chief executive Vic Beck, who has battled tirelessly for businesses impacted by the CRL works, said uncertainty looms large for the project.

    “It is extremely disappointing for the city that the benefits won’t be reaped sooner, and particularly for those impacted by construction. This creates more anxiety because there is no fixed date for it to be operational. For some, that could now be up to 10 years of major disruption and impacts on them and their business,” she said.

    Beck has called for a review of the $12 million fund set aside for affected businesses to be sped up, saying no one should lose their livelihood for a public project.

    - Bernard Orsman, NZH

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    Jordan Williams: Taxpayer's Union Executive Director says Auckland Transport is focusing on the wrong things

    Jordan Williams: Taxpayer's Union Executive Director says Auckland Transport is focusing on the wrong things

    A concern Auckland Transport isn't focusing on the right things.

    Seven Auckland railway stations are getting new names, including the city’s busiest train station, Britomart.

    The Taxpayer's Union says it seems there are too many comms staff and not enough engineers at the agency.

    Executive Director Jordan Williams says there are so many other problems worth fixing.

    He says there is a bus driver shortage, closed rail lines and cost blowouts on the City Rail Link.

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    Wayne Brown: Auckland Mayor on the City Rail Link bill

    Wayne Brown: Auckland Mayor on the City Rail Link bill

    Auckland's Mayor doesn't want to go halves on the bill for Auckland's City Rail link cost blowout.

    The team's asked for an extra billion dollars, to be split evenly by Council and Government.

    Wayne Brown says he want to get as much out of the Government as he can.

    He told Heather du Plessis-Allan that he's not keen for the Council to pony up.

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