The final piece of work to improve safety in and around the Homer Tunnel has started.
The tunnel — the entrance to Milford Sound — has been getting safety improvements over the past two years.
Much of the old avalanche shelter on the Te Anau side of the State Highway94 entrance to the tunnel has been knocked down.
It will be replaced by the new government-funded $29million project’s avalanche and rockfall shelter, a 45m extension of the Homer Tunnel itself, designed for portable, modular, quick installation.
More than 150 pre-cast concrete units were being made in Ashburton and would be transported to the site over the coming months, the agency said.
Work was set to be completed in May next year.
An upgraded tunnel power and lighting system, as well as new speakers inside the tunnel to communicate with people in an emergency, had been installed in recent years.
A new protected duct had been built along the 1.2km length of the tunnel to protect cabling, fibre and other systems during a fire.
There was also a new, safer viewing area for visitors, a plant and equipment building near the tunnel, upgraded power supply and an upgraded solar-powered communications tower.