TWO infrastructure stories in today's Newcastle Herald highlight the importance of long-term urban planning, the advantages that accrue from efficient transport links, and the competing priorities that must often be managed in decision-making.
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The transport links themselves - a southern addition to the celebrated Fernleigh Track walkway and cycleway, and a 150-metre link road into the Summerhill Waste Management Centre - are not huge projects in themselves.
But each is important in their own way.
The $12-million extension to the Fernleigh route will take it from Belmont to Blacksmiths, with part of the route being a 1.6-kilometre section to run beside the Pacific Highway.
Safety is a huge issue with cycling, and although cyclists regularly share the road with motor vehicles, best practice must surely be to have dedicated cycleways where possible.
Real world projects often differ substantially from early artist's impressions, but it is worth noting that the "shared track" at Belmont has been envisaged with a barrier protecting pedestrians from the highway, but with a cycleway on the road side of the fence.
Surely, if millions of dollars in public money are to be put towards such a venture, better protection could be offered to the cyclists from traffic?
The Summerhill road also raises a "conflict of use" question, pitting the advantages to be gained from a new, second entrance into the facility against the desires - and legal rights - of a major landowner, the Winten Group, which owns a major arc of land south and west of Summerhill, through which the proposed link road would run.
Summerhill is a massive operation, and as reporter Max McKinney observes, has a century of landfill capacity in front of it.
Given its importance also as a recycling centre - and as a power generator, with its substantial solar array - planning issues relating to the steady encroachment of housing along the corridor between Maryland and Minmi need to be settled sooner rather than later.
The Fletcher developments north and east of Summerhill have grown enormously since the landfill was established, and the Winton land - on paper at least - has the potential to bring housing even closer than it is at the moment.
As with the Belmont cycleway, it's a question of separation.
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