By ALLAN ODHIAMBO
In Summary
The Naivasha- Gilgil section of the Northern Corridor
is set to get special concrete truck lanes as part of an emergency
project seeking to ease congestion on the road that connects Kenya to
East Africa’s landlocked markets.
The Kenya National Highways Authority (KeNha) said the
project will involve construction of 3.5 metre-wide concrete lanes for
use by heavy trucks proceeding for checks at the weighbridge station.
“The project starts two kilometres from Gilgil
weighbridge (Nairobi bound) and ends 1.5 km after the weighbridge on the
A104 road,” KeNha said.
The area around Gilgil is presently prone to
massive traffic gridlocks mainly caused by trucks queuing to access the
weighbridge. The gridlocks often stretch for tens of kilometres on
either side of the weighbridge station and last for many hours, leaving
traders and commuters highly inconvenienced.
“We are now tendering, work starts within a month’s time,” Peter Mundinia, KeNha director-general told Shipping& Logistics.
The stop-gap measure will come as a relief to
thousands of road users who have in recent years experienced massive
gridlocks around the weighbridge.
“Issues have been raised on the design of the
weighbridge because it directly sits on the highway and traffic has to
be interrupted whenever trucks slow down to queue at the facility. It is
envisaged that future redesign and expansion work on the Nakuru-Nairobi
road will factor in the current inconveniences,” an engineer at KeNha
said.
Concerns have also been raised over the design of
the weighbridge at Mlolongo where truckers from the Mombasa side of the
highway have to turn right to access it leading to massive traffic snarl
ups.
The weighbridge managers, SGS Kenya proposed the
construction of a second facility to help address the present design
challenges at Mlolongo.
“Trucks from Mombasa have to turn right to enter
the facility which inconveniences other road users as it slows traffic
but a second weighbridge would solve this problem,” SGS managing
director Albert Stockell said last year.
Besides the stop-gap measure to ease congestion
around Gilgil, the government plans to expand the entire 157km
Nairobi-Nakuru highway into a dual carriage status under a Public
Private Partnership (PPP) model to improve the flow of traffic to
western Kenya and other areas such as the Great Lakes region.
The conversion of the Nairobi-Nakuru highway would
supplement efficient flow of traffic between the Nairobi-Mombasa road
that is also marked for expansion.
The Treasury last year picked a consortium led by
consultancy firm PricewaterhouseCoopers to offer transaction advisory
for expansion of the Mombasa-Nairobi highway (A109) into a dual
carriageway in yet another move aimed at easing traffic to Mombasa port.
The 485km Nairobi-Mombasa highway is deemed
critical for trade in the region because of its link to the Mombasa port
which is the main gateway to East Africa and also serves markets in
South Sudan and the Great Lakes region, handling key goods including
fuel, consumer goods and other imports as well as exports of tea and
coffee from the region.
No comments:
Post a Comment