$17 Million Over Budget: Kererū Gorge Culvert Rebuild Hits $30M After Cyclone Gabrielle
By Lions Roar News Infrastructure Desk
HAWKE’S BAY, NZ (January 6, 2026) — The cost of rebuilding the vital Kererū Gorge culvert following the devastation of Cyclone Gabrielle has more than doubled, soaring from an initial estimate of $13 million to a final total of $30 million.
The massive $17 million “budget blowout” has raised eyebrows across the region, highlighting the extreme complexities and rising costs associated with post-cyclone infrastructure recovery in difficult terrain.
📉 From $13M to $30M: What Happened?
When the project was first conceptualized, engineers estimated a $13 million price tag to restore access to the remote community. However, as work progressed, several factors drove the costs into the tens of millions:
- Geological Challenges: The Kererū Gorge’s steep and unstable terrain required much more extensive engineering and stabilization than originally anticipated.
- Inflation & Supply Chain: Rising costs for specialized materials and a shortage of heavy engineering contractors post-Gabrielle added significant premiums to the project.
- Design Upgrades: To ensure the new culvert could withstand future “one-in-a-hundred-year” weather events, the design was significantly bolstered, moving from a standard replacement to a high-resilience structure.
🛣️ A Lifeline for the Community
Despite the high cost, local officials emphasize that the culvert is a non-negotiable lifeline. The Kererū Gorge route is the primary access point for many farming families and rural residents who were isolated for weeks following the 2023 cyclone.
- Project Scope: The rebuild involved massive earthworks, a custom-engineered drainage system, and extensive road realignments.
- Funding: A large portion of the $30 million is expected to be covered by central government recovery funds, though local taxpayers may still bear some of the burden through council rates.
⚖️ Accountability vs. Necessity
The cost increase has sparked debate in the Hawke’s Bay community. While many residents are relieved to have a safe, permanent road again, others are questioning the accuracy of initial council estimates and the oversight of recovery spending.
“We knew it would be expensive, but a $17 million increase is hard to swallow,” says one local ratepayer advocate. “We need to understand if this was a failure of planning or simply the reality of building in the Gorge.”
