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Walkways & cycleways

As society seeks to address climate shift and to encourage community health, cycling and walking facilities have become an increasingly central amenity in new and existing urban areas.  Simultaneously, a quest for accessing the much larger, natural spaces and coastlines beyond cities is seeing demand for low-key paths that bring people into those sensitive places without compromising them.

We have an extensive background in planning, designing and overseeing the implementation of this wide spectrum of off-road access corrridors, spanning from a strategy for a path along the entire eastern coast of Whangarei District (which subsequently became largely adopted as the Te Araroa route) through to heavily-used urban shared paths linking the CBD, schools, sporting facilities and living areas.

Detail of stainless steel mesh infill of Corten steel balustrade with riparian planning in background.

Walkway / cycleway

Waiarohia stream | Whangārei

Timber bench seat on pebble pad, surrounded by low native planting and nikau palm, with bollard lighting nestled in planting along concrete path edge.

Walkway / cycleway

Waiarohia stream | Whangārei

Plan view of the Kamo Shared Path with labels and divided into sections.

Walkway / cycleway

Kamo to city centre | Whangārei

Concrete path with planting along railway line, a pedestrian with dog is wating at the traffic lights in the background of the image.

Walkway / cycleway

Kamo to city centre | Whangārei

Straight concrete path with brick header strips, established shrub planting alongside with rewarewa tree, a red mobility scooter can be seen in the distance.

Walkway / cycleway

Kamo to city centre | Whangārei

Concrete path forming curving away in the distance, with lawn on left side and established shrub planting along the right side, established rewarewa trees in the foreground.

Walkway / cycleway

Kamo to city centre | Whangārei

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