State Significant Infrastructure
Windsor Bridge Replacement
Hawkesbury City
Current Status: Determination
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Windsor Bridge Replacement
Consolidated Approval
Modifications
Archive
Application (3)
DGRs (1)
EIS (95)
Submissions (1)
Agency Submissions (6)
Response to Submissions (14)
Assessment (38)
Recommendation (2)
Determination (2)
Approved Documents
Management Plans and Strategies (25)
Reports (5)
Other Documents (22)
Note: Only documents approved by the Department after November 2019 will be published above. Any documents approved before this time can be viewed on the Applicant's website.
Complaints
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Make a ComplaintEnforcements
There are no enforcements for this project.
Inspections
24/02/2020
16/09/2020
16/11/2020
8/02/2021
7/04/2021
12/04/2022
Note: Only enforcements and inspections undertaken by the Department from March 2020 will be shown above.
Submissions
Gordon Chirgwin
Comment
Gordon Chirgwin
Message
This makes no hydraulic and structural sense. The piers for this bridge should be modelled on Colo River bridge on Putty Road. The superstructure shoul likewise be based on Colo River. Bridge Branch of RMS has the drawings.
This would provide a better aesthetic design as well as a design more suited to flooding.
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
Peter Karl
Comment
Peter Karl
Message
In my option yes we need a new bridge but you are only looking at this for the short turn to please the people ,look ahead in the future with more and more people coming to the area and that means more vehicles and possibly more trucks, it should have 4 lanes yes OK the cost will be greater but the cost now will be cheaper than in the next 10-20 years you only have to look at freeways built back 10-20-30 years earlier now you have to spend triple the cost due to high demand.
The other thing is FLOODS yes may be the bridge is out of the floods but no one is able to cross due to the road to Wilberforce will be under water and also the flats between Windsor and mcgraths hill also under water so the bridge is no good for people on the northern side they still are not able to get to work and into town so it would be a lot cheaper to lift them roads also out of FLOOD areas so there is access for all the people from the north side also and also truck movements.
Regards
Peter
Peter Auld
Object
Peter Auld
Message
Serious consideration needs to be given to an alternate bi-pass option that is enjoyed by other historic towns
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
Kay Wilson
Object
Kay Wilson
Message
I have been told in the future there will be three lanes, what I can't understand, why is it in the future, and will you take responsibility for any damage or lives lost whilst waiting for the future.
Kay Wilson.
Michael Walsh
Object
Michael Walsh
Message
Murray West
Comment
Murray West
Message
Lawrence Smith
Object
Lawrence Smith
Message
john jose
Object
john jose
Message
There are today (2012) 19,000 vehicles per day using the existing bridge, this number will increase with future development north of the river and this emerging highway will put greater strains on this sensitive heritage area.
Option 1 is only a short term fix, it does nothing to solve Windsor's longer term traffic problems, it is as the EIS says a replacement, whereas it should be an opportunity to grasp the real problems ie, the restoration of Thompson Square and Windsor's traffic woes and to do something about it.
To claim that the option 1 site is the historical river crossing site is ridiculous, it was the case for horse and cart but there were no semi-trailers then.
The existing bridge is nowadays considered too narrow for trucks and does not meet current design standards and a replacement bridge would need to be much wider. It is for this reason that I believe that the bigger replacement bridge can not be successfully placed in Thompson Square without suffering the aforementioned consequences.
To achieve the results of a restored Thompson Square and a better traffic flow for Windsor we need a proper by-pass bridge route, our existing bridge repaired and used for light traffic and Thompson Square relieved of its current large volumes of traffic.
I therefore urge the RMS to reconsider this project and direct their efforts towards providing a by-pass bridge.
Lesley Hayes
Object
Lesley Hayes
Message
I know that the same thing applies to the beautiful historic town of Windsor. The Hawkesbury area is very susceptible to flooding and this is one of the reasons that Governor Macquarie deemed it necessary to lay out five towns in the Hawkesbury area in 1810. He knew that it was important that food be grown on this fertile floodland. It was also important for the farmers of the land to be able to retreat to the high ground within the towns when the waters rose.
The curse of flooding has been a mixed blessing for Windsor because it has meant that the town has survived the perils of overhousing because of the building restrictions on the height of land above flood level. There is very little land left within the township which can be developed because of the building level restrictions and the result is that we have this beautiful little historic town just an hours drive from Sydney laid out in much the way the Governor Macquarie decreed with open plains all around.
We are lucky that Windsor sits on the fringes of the urban growth of Sydney and so was saved from the ravages of the 1970's when so many important buildings were lost. Every weekend people come to visit Windsor. They stroll through the township; gaze at the historic buildings, including two Greenway buildings still being used as a church and a court house as was their original intention. Many of the visitors have lunch or dinner in Thompson Square listening to the music provided by the Macquarie Arms Hotel (the oldest continuously operating pub in NSW) and watching the horse and coach clop slowly past on its rounds of Windsor.
I have lived in the Hawkesbury district for almost 30 years and in that time I have come to appreciate what a truly significant piece of history we have preserved in the small township of Windsor. I know that the introduction of a high level bridge directly beside Thompson square will destroy the beautiful ambience of this historic town. It will split the town in half and completely alter the experience of visiting the town. Imagine if we put a road directly through the middle of the `Rocks' area and encouraged the trucks to run through day and night, how this would impact on the experience of visiting that historic precinct. Financially there are benefits to keeping Windsor as it is in the long term. Tourists have to have destinations to visit, and Windsor is now, and will continue to grow, as an important tourist destination.
Please listen to the recommendations of the National Trust and the many concerns raised in the Environmental Impact Statement about the detrimental effect this new bridge will have on the historic aspects of Windsor township and consider the possibility of providing a bypass around Windsor, whilst keeping the existing bridge for light traffic.
It is important to understand that the historic value of Windsor to NSW and the rest of Australia will be realized in future years. There is more to history than buildings and lawns, we have a living, working historic town that future generations will appreciate, just as we now appreciate the value of the `Rocks' area. If we consider this in a purely financial level today we will lose something of inestimable value in the future, and we will never be able to restore this loss.
garry medina
Object
garry medina
Message
judging by the proposal put forward my property value is about to plummet and any development of my property will be useless as who will want to live or work adjacent to a major highway. (and an ugly elevated roadway at that!) take away the historic precinct and you will take away the tourists. take away the historic precinct and you take away much of the value of the properties facing thompson square.
i for one will be seeking compensation from the dept. responsible for any desecration of the area and in particular,
the value lost on my property.
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
Unfortunately, there was a group of a few that were very loud and not forthcoming about the truth of Thompson Square and the bridge. I sinceley hope that the RMS dismiss their petition as the public that has signed same was not made FULLY aware of the proposals being put forward.
Again I thank the RMS on taking on and making some considerations as suggested by our community.
Thank you
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
Unfortunately, there was a group of a few that were very loud and not forthcoming about the truth of Thompson Square and the bridge. I sinceley hope that the RMS dismiss their petition as the public that has signed same was not made FULLY aware of the proposals being put forward.
Again I thank the RMS on taking on and making some considerations as suggested by our community.
Thank you
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
Paul Baker
Object
Paul Baker
Message
There is no benefit to Windsor in this project, there is only detriment. This bridge will hurt Windsor at its core - its heritage. The heritage which brings tourist trade out every weekend will suffer, and hence the trade will drop. Stores will close, the town will suffer irrecoverably.
The numbers in this document are massaged, manipulated and altered to fit their own ideas. They refuse access to the raw data as they know it will prove otherwise. Just try to request it, you won't get it.