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Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Govt to fast track three more interchanges in East by 2022

by

Shaliza Hassanali
1744 days ago
20200614
An aerial view of the Curepe Interchange.

An aerial view of the Curepe Interchange.

MINISTRY OF WORKS

Gov­ern­ment is mov­ing to fast track con­struc­tion of three in­ter­changes in east Trinidad to help fur­ther al­le­vi­ate traf­fic woes faced dai­ly by mo­torists.

Plans are afoot to build in­ter­changes at Trinci­ty, Pi­ar­co/Gold­en Grove and Ma­coya by 2022.

News of the in­ter­changes came from Works and Trans­port Min­is­ter Ro­han Sinanan four days af­ter Prime Min­is­ter Dr Kei­th Row­ley opened the $221 mil­lion Curepe In­ter­change.

Sinanan told Guardian Me­dia that the Curepe In­ter­change was sup­posed to be built by the then Peo­ple’s Part­ner­ship gov­ern­ment be­tween 2010 and 2012, while Ma­coya In­ter­change was ex­pect­ed to start short­ly af­ter.

Sinanan said this nev­er hap­pened be­cause of wrang­ings be­tween two UNC min­is­ters over which con­trac­tor should have been award­ed the mil­lion dol­lar con­tract for the Curepe In­ter­change.

This re­sult­ed in the project be­ing de­layed by sev­er­al years.

“It al­so caused con­struc­tion on the oth­er in­ter­changes in the East to be put on hold.”

Up­on as­sum­ing of­fice in 2015, Sinanan said the PNM-led Gov­ern­ment re-ten­dered the Curepe In­ter­change project in 2017 and it was de­liv­ered ear­li­er this year.

Now, he said the Gov­ern­ment was eye­ing con­struc­tion of three new in­ter­changes.

In Sep­tem­ber, Sinanan said a ten­der will be award­ed “for the de­sign build” of the Ma­coya In­ter­change and they will fast track con­struc­tion of the Trinci­ty and Gold­en Grove/Pi­ar­co In­ter­changes which should be com­plet­ed by the end of 2022.

He said the con­tract for Ma­coya will be award­ed by the end of this year with work to be­gin in Jan­u­ary 2021.

“It could be done if politi­cians do not in­ter­fere with the process. We will do it the right way us­ing the tem­plate from the Curepe In­ter­change. We an­tic­i­pate that by 2022 we should be able to dri­ve from Port-of-Spain to at least Pi­ar­co In­ter­na­tion­al Air­port with­out any in­ter­rup­tions on the road net­work.”

Con­struc­tion of the Ma­coya In­ter­change will see the re­moval of the UWI, Pasea and Ma­coya traf­fic lights to en­sure a smooth flow of ve­hi­cles.

Sinanan said it was the Gov­ern­ment’s pol­i­cy to re­move all traf­fic lights from Port-of-Spain to San­gre Grande.

He said, “The last ma­jor in­ter­sec­tion we have is Tumpuna Road in Ari­ma. From Tumpuna we have the Cu­mu­to to San­gre Grande High­way which was de­signed with no lights. So it would be smooth sail­ing.”

So far, the min­istry has put out a ten­der for a con­sul­tant to un­der­take a traf­fic study and to come up with con­cep­tu­al de­signs for the in­ter­changes.

Asked if the three in­ter­changes will be built at the same time, Sinanan said he was await­ing feed­back from the traf­fic study to de­ter­mine if it would be fea­si­ble to do.

“We want to fast track build­ing the in­ter­changes and have them done by 2022.”

He said the in­ter­changes will be built on green fields sites and would cost far less than the Curepe In­ter­change.

“So we do not an­tic­i­pate any land ac­qui­si­tion or dis­lo­ca­tion of home­own­ers and busi­ness­es. What we have done in Curepe is set the bench­mark for pric­ing of these in­ter­changes.”

Sinanan said fund­ing for the new road net­work will be se­cured by the Min­istry of Fi­nance.

“The Gov­ern­ment has iden­ti­fied the con­struc­tion sec­tor as a ma­jor sec­tor to stim­u­late the econ­o­my.”


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