Eastbound traffic exiting the planned 148-ha Rangiuru Business Park could end up being forced to use the old highway under proposals due to be heard by the Western Bay District Council next week.
A new option has been proposed to build a three-legged interchange with the Tauranga Eastern Link (TEL) instead of the approved four-legged interchange. It meant traffic leaving the business park and heading to Whakatane and Rotorua would be unable to use the new motorway.
Bay of Plenty Regional Council-owned Quayside Properties, which owned most of the land, sought planning changes to improve the financial viability of the project which was hit by the Global Financial Crisis of 2008 - the same year the business park got planning approval.
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The three-legged interchange was part of the review of the viability of the park by Quayside Properties, a subsidiary of the regional council's investment arm Quayside Holdings which holds a majority shareholding in the Port of Tauranga.