Erosion has caused the road to fall away making it dangerous for traffic. Photo / Warren Buckland
Road washouts are threatening to cut off a small community on the Mahia Peninsula, best known to most of New Zealand as the home of Rocket Lab's launch site.
Members of the community say they are frustrated with the amount of time it is taking to fix the three washoutson Mahia East Coast Rd.
Resident Denis Murphy said the community is already almost cut off, with several areas of the road already one way.
"Anywhere else in New Zealand, if you had a road like that, you wouldn't be allowed to drive past it."
They weren't troubled by or having an effect on the road, the spokespersons said.
"It isn't related to Rocket Lab's traffic."
Murphy said he wanted to see a longer-term, more permanent solution and believed it could be done by strengthening washout areas with concrete.
He said when the bank under the main bridge in Wairoa was washed out by a flood, the issue was fixed immediately.
"They don't do that here, that's our big argument, it doesn't get done here."
Wairoa District Mayor Craig Little said he did not think there would be support for the Mahia coastline being strengthened with concrete, as well as it being a costly exercise.
"I think they have looked at that in the past, it's millions and millions of dollars.
"It is a beautiful area and if we make it all concrete I don't think we would get a lot of support to be honest."
He said the council were looking at building an inland road and NZTA were keeping an eye on that idea.
"We're looking at the longer term, but NZTA they want to see whatever we are doing has been engineered and that it's going to be lasting," Little said.
"While that coast is beautiful, it's costing helluva lot to keep that road.
"There's one place out there you'll see a yellow line at the edge of the road, well that yellow line, the road used to be the other side of that."
Murphy said the community did not want a new inland road.
"In all our years Mahia has never asked for anything, all we want to do is make it safe."