• Tyre specialist stunned at car damage from Napier roadworks

    From News@63:10/102 to All on Tue Mar 25 14:47:37 2025
    By Linda Hall, Local Democracy Reporter
    14 mins ago

    A tyre specialist says the damage caused to dozens of cars from driving
    through roadworks in Napier is the worst he has ever seen, and there is "no solution" for drivers who were caught in it.


    By 3pm on Monday, Napier City Council had received 35 service requests from drivers who had travelled through the works on Meeanee Rd on Sunday.


    Motorists caught in it have described loose tar and chip seal piling onto
    their tyres, slowing their cars to an almost undriveable speed, while stones shaking loose from other vehicles chipped at their paintwork and windscreens.


    One reported receiving eight windscreen chips in one go.


    Napier City Council said heat and heavy traffic were to blame for the chip sealing issue - saying there were "larger than expected traffic volumes along Meeanee Rd and higher than expected temperatures on the day of construction".


    To prevent it from happening again, council would do a review on reducing traffic throughput on the seals during construction and consider other events in the surrounding area - a speedway event went ahead at Meeanee over the weekend.


    Arnie Lal from The Tyre Shop in Napier said the photos he had seen on social media of damaged cars were the worst he'd seen.


    "You can't get that off tyres. I have no solution," Lal said.


    "There is a product that you can use on your car to get spots of tar seal off paintwork but to try and get it into every nook and cranny on a tyre would be
    a huge job. And I have no idea what effect soaking the tyre in it would be on the rubber."


    A council spokesperson said while it had insurance for this type of incident, impacted drivers should speak to their own insurance company in the first instance.


    Hawke's Bay resident Natalya said she contacted customer service at NCC
    around 10.40am on Sunday, after driving through the roadworks.


    "I turned onto one of the side roads as my car was going really slow, about 20km/h," Natalya said.


    "It was frightening as I was not sure what was going on until I parked and looked at the car. I've never seen anything like it."


    She called her son and the council and sent an email and photos.


    "I was lucky, a local farmer came out and helped me scrape some of the rocks off with metal tools so I could slowly make my way home."


    She received a reply from NCC saying it had lodged her email to the Transportation Team for further response and action.


    Another person, who didn't want to be named, said when they got to the
    section being resealed, they slowed right down, even stopping at times
    because of the traffic.


    "But my wheels still got absolutely covered in tar and loose stones. Even though everyone was driving carefully and keeping a safe distance, stones
    were flying everywhere, and my bonnet ended up with multiple chips.

    "My tyres were so coated that debris kept flying off for ages, and I even
    lost traction at roundabouts despite driving safely. The noises from my tyres got so bad I had to pull over to check them."


    LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air

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