Kwekwe–Gokwe Highway

Last updated

The Kwekwe-Gokwe Highway or the R84-7 Highway is an all-weather bitumen macadam highway in Zimbabwe running from Kwekwe to Gokwe passing through Zhombe. As a trunk road it is officially designated as the P11 Highway.

Contents

It is 141 kilometres (88 mi) from Kwekwe to Gokwe but the highway which branches off from the A5 (Harare-Bulawayo Highway) is 137 kilometres (85 mi), a 1-hour-50-minute drive on average. [1] [2]

Management

The Zimbabwe National Road Administration (ZINARA), a government department under the Ministry of Transport, Communication and Infrastructural Development, oversees the highway. [3]

Background

In the 1973 Automobile Association national roadmap, the Kwekwe–Gokwe road (then Que Que–Gokwe road) was a gravel one for about 99% of its present length. Only 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) of the old Gokwe road was asphalt surface from Kwekwe. [4]

Reconstruction

The former gravel road was expanded in width and tarred from 31 January 1986 [5] to 31 March 1991. [6]

Operations

The original plan was to construct a 7-metre-wide (23 ft) carriageway with two 1.5-metre (4.9 ft) shoulders. The road is however 6 metres (20 ft) with 2 0.5-metre (1.6 ft) shoulders constructed according to the revised plan of 1986. [7]

Bridges

From Kwekwe to Gokwe the road passes over various rivers with standard bridges. The rivers are Kwekwe River, Rhino River, Chimwamombe River, Sesombe River, Mandombe River, Somalala River, Ngazimbi River, Zhombe River, Gwenzi River, Sehozana River, Little Sehozana River, Ufafi River and the Ngondoma River. There are no sizable rivers on the Gokwe side across the highway until after the town. [8]

Feeder roads

Luveve-Donjane Road

Luveve-Donjane Road branches westwards, passes through Tiger Reef gold mine and stretches 48.3 km, a 42 minute drive to Mushangi Shopping Center in Donjane joining the Somalala-Sidakeni Road there.

This is the shortest route from Kwekwe to Zhombe East, yet it is the slowest, as it is all gravel with a number of unprotected small bridges. However, there is one big bridge across the Sesombe River.

Luveve-Silobela Road

Luveve-Nkayi Road is a paved road officially called P8 Highway. It branches left at the same place Luveve-Donjane Road branches right.

Luveve-Nkayi Road is also known as Kwekwe-Nkayi Road, but the road actually begins from the Kwekwe-Gokwe Highway at Luveve crossroads well outside Kwekwe.

The road has one big bridge across Gweru River near Loreto Mission before reaching Crossroads District Service Center.

The road feeds Silobela and Nkayi, and from Nkayi, it continues as P9 Road to join the Victoria Falls Bulawayo Highway.

Somalala–Sidakeni Road

Somalala–Sidakeni Road (R84-103), popularly known as Zhombe East Road, is a 46 km long gravel road, connecting Kwekwe-Gokwe Highway and the Kadoma-Gokwe-via-Empress Road. It branches right from the Kwekwe-Gokwe Highway at just past the 50 km peg from Kwekwe.

Zhombe East Road feeds Donjane, Bhamala, Totororo, and Sidakeni.

There is a District Development Fund roads division deport at Mushangi Business Center in Donjane giving this road first preference on development.

It has one bridge across Zhombe River near the 25 km peg heading north.

Zhombe River bridge in Zhombe east. View from the east. Zhombe River Bridge east.jpg
Zhombe River bridge in Zhombe east. View from the east.

Zhombe-Sidakeni Road

Zhombe-Sidakeni Road (Road 84-102) branches right from the Kwekwe-Gokwe Road at southern outskirts of Zhombe Joel District Service Center. It is sometimes called Senkwasi Road.

It is 33 km to the Kadoma-Gokwe-via-Empress Road. It feeds Gwesela West, Empress Mine, Sidakeni and Mabura.

Some sections of the road in Manzamunyama and Navata are very slippery during rainy seasons.

Zhombe-Silobela Road

Zhombe-Silobela Road branches left at Zhombe Joel and it is a 39.5 km long gravel road. It passes through Gwenzi, Mavuli, Hwida, Ntabeni then joins Luveve-Silobela Road (Kwekwe-Nkai Road) 8.7 km short of Gweru River bridge and 24 km short of Crossroads Growth Point. Loreto Mission is just less than 1 km from Gweru River Bridge. From Zhombe Joel this road has unclear routes to Exchange Irrigation Scheme but local people use various secondary roads to the scheme.

Fafi-St Judes Road

Fafi-St Judes Road branches left at Fafi shopping center, before Ngondoma River and it feeds Ntombankala and Dendera areas up to St Judes School. Some like to call this road the St Judes Crescent because of its loop-road characteristics with Champeni-St Judes Road. It makes a good round about at St Judes School and returns to Kwekwe-Gokwe Highway as Champeni-St Judes Road.

Muzvezve-Chemagora Road

Gokwe-Emnpress Road towards Ngondoma River Bridge Chemagora-Sidakeni Road.jpg
Gokwe-Emnpress Road towards Ngondoma River Bridge

Muzvezve-Chemagora Road is the local name of the road called Gokwe-Empress Road. Still some like to describe it fully in calling it the Kadoma-Gokwe-via-Empress Road, but the road neither reaches Kadoma nor Gokwe in its own capacity. Some sections among villages along the length of this road call it the Venice-Chemagora Road. Venice is a mine only 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) from its intersection with the Harare-Bulawayo Highway and Chemagora is the area where this road branches right from the Kwekwe-Gokwe Highway. Sidakeni is the main village in which the road passes through this side of the Munyati River.

It is a 9-foot tarred road, and it is the oldest tarred road in Kwekwe District (north). It branches off to the right from Kwekwe-Gokwe Road just past the 73 km and goes past Sidakeni and crosses the Munyati River to join the A5. This is the shortest route for traffic from Harare to Gokwe South District.

From the Kwekwe-Gokwe Highway the road feeds Gokwe-East, Mabura, Empress Mine and Sidakeni.

From the A5 the Gokwe-Empress Road branches westwards 22 kilometres (14 mi) south of Kadoma at A5 Empress Mine Turnoff" a place popularly called "Mtarimanja" and officially Muzvezve. 18°29′22″S29°49′49″E / 18.48951°S 29.83017°E / -18.48951; 29.83017 (Gokwe-Empress Road) Muzvezve is a river across the A5 a few kilometres north of this turn-off.

The Muzvezve-Chemagora Road goes for 74 kilometres (46 mi) as a link to the R847 Highway which is the Kwekwe-Gokwe Highway or the P11.

It passes through Venice Mine and Donain before reaching the Munyati River Bridge (Empress).

It enters Kwekwe-Gokwe Highway at Chemagora, popularly known as Empress Turnoff. 18°29′22″S29°49′49″E / 18.48951°S 29.83017°E / -18.48951; 29.83017 (Chemagora-Sidakeni Road)

Sembeula Road

Sembeula Road branches left just before Raj Center (-18.525702, 29.806548) and stretches 50.2 km to Gweru River Bridge in Nkai area well past Sembeula Village. (-18.719823 28.814896)

Masoro Road

Masoro Road or Hovano-Chinyudze Road is a 54 km (1-hour 5 min drive) gravel loop road that joins Kwekwe-Gokwe Road and Kadoma-Gokwe-via-Empress Road. It turns right from the Kwekwe-Gokwe Road just short of the 120 km peg from Kwekwe. It is the Old Kadoma-Gokwe Road.

It is not a safe road for vehicles in poor condition. The road descends from the Mapfungautsi Plateau on a very steep pass. It feeds Masoro, Tongwe, Mazalayedwa, Gwanika and Maliyami.

It joins the Chemagora-Sidakeni at Masoro Turnoff popularly known as Chinyudze, about 5 km west of Columbina Township.

Connectivity

The road connects Zhombe and Gokwe South areas to all parts of the country via its Kwekwe end. [9] It serves Zhombe Communal Land, Chemagora purchase area, Gokwe, Nemangwe, Mutimutema and Sengwa coal mines.

Economic viability

There has been improved economic and business growth in areas served by the road over the years. [10] Both Zhombe Joel and Gokwe have experienced economic growth because of the impact of the feeder road.

Road traffic statistics

Although there is no railway line to Gokwe, the road network, courtesy of the main R847 Kwekwe-Gokwe, has proved excellent. Road vehicles of all kinds and sizes are increasing just as in bigger towns and cities.

According to the project performance evaluation report of the Zimbabwe Rural Roads Project number 1, the flow of vehicles of all sizes in 1984 had an average of 131 per day. In 1991, when the tarred road was opened, the flow of such vehicles rose to 212 with a marked increase of heavy vehicles and buses. By 2011, the flow of vehicles was as high as 660 per day, with heavy goods vehicles topping the list at an average of 321 per day.

Unlike other Zimbabwean highways, the R847 has no toll gates, but the flow of vehicles on the road per day has since doubled the 2011 averages, according to statistics elsewhere on major highways. In past years, the annual average daily traffic was done by traffic recording devices or by human observers who visually had to count and record traffic on tally sheets. However, at the fall of the Zimbabwean dollar the staffed system was dropped only to come up later in the form of the toll gates system, which count vehicles by weight and generate revenue at the same time. The Kwekwe–Gokwe Highway is yet to have a toll gate.

The increase of heavy vehicles spells the growth of business in Gokwe, Zhombe and other centers in the north-eastern parts of Matabeleland North Province.

Beneficiaries

Settlements

The chief beneficiary of the R847 is Gokwe, which has become the newest town in Zimbabwe credit to the Kwekwe–Gokwe Highway. [11]

Zhombe Joel, CMB Nemangwe and Kabuyuni-Chitekete growth points have also grown to suburban standards.

Empress Mine and Columbina Township though in link roads are beneficiaries too.

Vehicle operators

Road traffic users and vehicle owners have also benefited from the R847 bitumen highway in terms of vehicle operating cost savings.

According to the project performance evaluation report of the Zimbabwe Rural Roads Project number 1, in 1984 the total savings on "vehicle operating costs" [12] for all sizes of vehicles that used the Kwekwe-Gokwe Road was $4,084,244 for 212 vehicles: an average of about $19,265 per vehicle. As per this same cost benefit analysis in 2010, nine years after the opening of the Kwekwe-Gokwe Highway, overall vehicle operating costs for 660 vehicles was $11,384,880: an average of $17,250 per vehicle, a reduction of about $2,000 per vehicle. [13]

See also

Related Research Articles

The government of Zimbabwe is the main provider of air, rail and road services; historically, there has been little participation of private investors in transport infrastructure.

Zhombe, originally known as Jombe, is a rural communal area in Kwekwe District, Midlands Province, Zimbabwe. It is an area of mixed Shona and Northern Ndebele People. It lies along the Mnyathi border line between Midlands and Mashonaland Provinces. There are a few commercial farms within its borders and a handful of resettlement areas. Most of it is within the Zhombe Constituency. Its administrative centre is the Zhombe Joel Growth Point, and it is under the Zibagwe Rural District Council.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kwekwe District</span> District in Kwekwe, Zimbabwe

Kwekwe, originally known as Que Que, is a district in Zimbabwe.

Silobela is an agricultural village in Kwekwe District in the Midlands Province of Zimbabwe. It is located about 60 kilometres (37 mi) west of Kwekwe town, 80 kilometres (50 mi) north-west of Gweru town, and bordering Nkayi on the west.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Columbina Rural Service Center</span> Township in Midlands, Zimbabwe

Columbina Rural Service Center is a populated place in Zhombe. It is 95 km northwest of Kwekwe and 67 km southwest of Kadoma.

Empress Mine Township is a populated place in the area formerly known as Salakuhle in Zhombe Communal Land, Kwekwe District of the Midlands Province in Zimbabwe. It is Zhombe's largest growth point yet officially it is rated second after Zhombe Joel, the current Zhombe District capital.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ngondoma Dam</span> Dam in Kwekwe District, Zimbabwe

Ngondoma Dam is a dam on the Ngondoma River located 500 meters west of the Empress Mine Township in the Midlands Province of Zimbabwe. The dam is 67 kilometers northwest of the Kwekwe and 54 km southwest of Kadoma.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ngondoma River</span> River in Zimbabwe

Ngondoma River is a river in Zhombe Communal Land, Kwekwe District in the Midlands province of Zimbabwe.

Samambwa Secondary School is a rural co-educational secondary school in Mabura ward of Kwekwe District.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sidakeni Secondary School</span> Day school in Zhombe-East, Midlands, Zimbabwe

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gweru District</span> District in Midlands, Zimbabwe

The A5 Highway is a national road in Zimbabwe. It joins the cities of Harare and Bulawayo, and is hence known as the Harare-Bulawayo Highway. It is one of the two routes that form the R2 Route, which connects Harare with the Plumtree Border with Botswana.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mutange Dam</span> Dam in Midlands, Zimbabwe

Mutange Dam, across Mutange River, is a manmade earth fill embarkment dam located in Chisina Village, 30 km east of Gokwe and 35 km northwest of Empress Mine, in the Midlands Province of Zimbabwe. Mutange Dam is 42 km by road from Gokwe and 49 km from Empress, 117 km from Kadoma and 146 km from Kwekwe via Empress. It is owned and operated by the Ministry of Water Resources and Development.

References

  1. Info 141 Km - Distance from kwekwe to Gokwe via Zhombe Distances from.com|Distance calculator|Retrieved 6 February 2016
  2. Map info Kwekwe Gokwe road map, Retrieved 6 February 2016
  3. Zinara Info |18 October 2012 Road Act: WHO IS ZINARA AND WHAT DOES IT DO? The Zimbabwe National Road Administration (ZINARA) is a body corporate established in terms of the Roads Act (Chapter13:18). ZINARA has prioritised the enhancement of a good road network system throughout the country. ZINARA |Articles | Retrieved 6 February 2016
  4. Rhodesian Maps | 1945 AA Road Map of Rhodesia1975 Archived 2016-11-04 at the Wayback Machine Archive of Rhodesia | AA Road Map of Rhodesia 1975 | Retrieved 6 February 2016
  5. African Development Back Group |16 August 1999 Page 4: Summary Data Sheet. Paragraph= B, Topic= Project Data, Item= #8: Commencement of work _31 January 1986. AFDB ] Operation Evaluation Department|Retrieved 6 February 2016
  6. African Development Back Group |16 August 1999 Page 4: Summary Data Sheet. Paragraph= B, Topic= Project Data, Item= #9: Completion of work _31 January 1986. AFDB | Operation Evaluation Department|Retrieved 6 February 2016
  7. African Development Back Group |16 August 1999 Page 14 Section 3.2: Changes in Project design; Subsection 3.2.2: R847 Kwekwe-Gokwe AFDB | Operation Evaluation Department|Retrieved 6 February 2016
  8. "| See the rivers on the AA Road Map of 1975 |". Archived from the original on 2016-11-04. Retrieved 2016-02-06.
  9. African Development Back Group |16 August 1999 Page 11 Section 2.6: Project Objectives and Scope at Appraisal; Subsection 2.6.2: The Kwekwe-Gokwe road has provided improved access and connection with the national network with the western part of the Midlands province which was isolated for many years Operation Evaluation Department|Retrieved 6 February 2016
  10. African Development Back Group |16 August 1999 Page 20. Section 4.4: Institutional and social performance; Subsection 4.4.16: The Kwekwe-Gokwe road witnessed a remarkable traffic growth with rates higher than 7% AFDB | Operation Evaluation Department|Retrieved 6 February 2016
  11. Urban Councils Association of Zimbabwe Gokwe Town Council Profile - HISTORY: Gokwe is relatively a new town which was established by statutory Instrument 170 of the 2006 proclamation 6 of 2006. The town evolved out of Gokwe South Rural District Council. Because of its rapid developmental rate it is one of the few urban settlements in Zimbabwe which graduated to a town direct from a Growth Point. Most urban centres have grown from a rural service centre to a local board, the lowest on the hierarchy of urban councils. Archived 2016-02-07 at the Wayback Machine www.ucaz.org |Member Profiles |Retrieved 6 February 2016
  12. Vehicle cost savings Transportation Benefit-Cost Analysis: (Changes in the costs of owning and operating vehicles "trucks as well as cars" resulting from a transportation improvement project are counted as benefits or disbenefits. EXAMPLES: Roadway capacity expansion reduces congestion delay which reduces fuel costs. Pothole repairs and street resurfacing reduces vehicle wear.) Benefit-Cost Analysis |Benefits |Retrieved 6 February 2016
  13. African Development Back Group |16 August 1999 Annex 10 page 1 of 4. Table: Savings in V.O.C. R847 Kwekwe-Gokwe (132km) Operation Evaluation Department|Retrieved 6 February 2016