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Watercare Frees Up $7 Million As Major Northern Interceptor Milestone Completed

Watercare has freed up $7million for other priority infrastructure projects after completing one of the largest concrete pours for the Northern Interceptor – a key project that will support housing growth, strengthen network resilience, and redirect flows to areas with available capacity.

Once the Northern Interceptor comes online in October, the chamber will redirect wastewater from Hobsonville to the Rosedale Wastewater Treatment Plant.

57,000 litres of concrete poured to lock in the walls of the confluence chamber (Photo/Supplied)

Programme director Rob Burchell says progress has been better than expected, reducing the cost of the connection from $25 million to $18 million.

“This has been driven by strong planning, design improvements, and proactive project management.

“Delivering key components on time and under budget means we can reallocate $7million to other projects in our $13.8billion 10-year Business Plan (2025 - 2034)."

Head of wastewater Andrew Deutschle says the connection will play a major role in improving network performance as Auckland grows.

Cementing in the walls of the confluence chamber was one of the most challenging parts of the connection works (Photo/Supplied)
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“Redirecting flows to Rosedale makes better use of the treatment capacity in the north.

“Over the next decade, flows from around 160,000 households will gradually shift from Māngere to Rosedale, reducing pressure in the south and improving performance across the city.”

Project manager Paula Steinmetz says building the confluence chamber was one of the most technically challenging parts of the work.

"More than 50,000 litres of concrete have been poured to form the walls of a new confluence chamber.

“The crew spent six hours completing the pour using a 47metre boom pump and specialist equipment to compact concrete around tight pipe penetrations.

Crews spent six hours completing the pour using a 47 metre boom pump (Photo/Supplied)

“The most complex area was around the Wairau Branch Sewer, which sits just 150mm above the base slab.

“Despite the difficulty, our construction partner SEIPP Construction completed the work with minimal rework needed.

“With the chamber walls finished, crews will now install a central column, two internal walls, precast roof beams, and then lay the Northern Interceptor pipework within the chamber.”

About Watercare

Every day, we supply about 440 million litres of safe drinking water to 1.7 million people in Auckland. We also collect and treat their wastewater.

Over the next 10 years, we will carry out more than 1000 projects to improve and expand our water and wastewater infrastructure – investing an average of $3.8 million every day ($13.8 billion in total).

Our infrastructure investment programme will help to keep our precious environment healthy by reducing the frequency of wastewater overflows onto land and into waterways.

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