Just read this on the Nation News site
Boardwalk nearly ready
Published on: 10/1/08.
by WENDY BURKE
THE ROCKLEY TO SIERRA Waterfront Improvement Project is nearing the end.
Project officials are reporting that the $18.4 million facelift, which began in June 2007, is about 85 per cent completed.
The project is to help combat coastal erosion and the coastal flooding which takes place almost every hurricane season and affects hotels and businesses which run along the seaside from Accra Beach in the east to St Matthias, Christ Church.
Acting Project manager and coastal engineer with the Coastal Zone Management Unit, Antonio Rowe, took the DAILY NATION team on a tour of the 1.6 kilometre long boardwalk.
It is comprised of five headlands – four of which are concrete, the other made up of granite rocks – to assist with the wave action. The action will prevent too much sand from being removed and stop the waves from coming too close inland.
"In terms of all the major construction, though, that is about 90 per cent [completed].
"The piles, concrete headlands that are to the front of this job, concrete steps, concrete revetments – we have pretty much completed most of those.
"The reason I would tell you that it is overall 85 per cent complete is that we still have a bit of landscaping and tidying up to do. The final project and how it would look in terms of the vegetation and so on has to be done," said Rowe.
He explained that the headlands were usually formed naturally but they had to build some to deal with the problems occurring.
"These are the structures that keep the sand in place because the beach naturally doesn't have any sand, if you put sand on it, it will move, so these are anchoring the sand placement," he said.
Headland One begins just behind Mapau Restaurant and the others span all the way to Accra Beach.
Some of the beach had to be reclaimed to protect the area.
"What we are going to do here is to bring in 14 000 cubic metres of sand in total to be placed in between each headland structure, and between every one of these we are going to place a beach.
"This is how we measure the area; we don't measure the actual space because between high and low tide – it changes. What we will do ultimately is, after a year of monitoring and the beach becomes stable, then we will measure to see how much it is, because the sea will begin to grade it."
Rowe said the boardwalk's decoration would be a sight to behold since they have used some of the finest Brazilian wood to create the benches.
He added that what the boardwalk did was to link beaches that were not connected before, thus giving more businesses access to a seaside view.
"Accra Beach is now linked to Coconut Court so, in effect, you can actually come onto Rockley when it is finished and get all the way down to Hilton just walking or running, and if the walk is too long there are seating areas on the headlands where you can actually stop and take a rest."
However, the official added there were some people a little too eager to test the boardwalk and they broke the safety barrier to get a look.
Rowe is cautioning against this and asking the public to please let the project be completed since it was enjoying a high-level safety record.



