1960-1961 — Page 67

Public Works Department Annual Report 工務司署年報 All AI Reviewed

ROADS OFFICE

WORKS SECTION

Chief Engineer (Acting),

W. T. KNIGHT, A.M.I.C.E., A.M.I.Mun.E., M.Inst.Q.

Assistant Chief Engineers,

B. W. JAMES, B.Sc. (Eng.), A.M.I.C.E.

W. C. BELL, A.M.I.C.E.

GENERAL

246. The severe rainstorms in May and Typhoon 'Mary' in June caused extensive damage to the Colony's roads, interrupted new construction and delayed re-surfacing. Several bridges in the New Territories sustained severe scouring to the abutments and piers and damage to wing-walls.

247. In addition to 9 miles of new construction, works included the reconstruction of 18 miles, the surfacing or resurfacing in bituminous carpet of 70 miles and the surface dressing of 25 miles of existing roads.

248. One feature of reconstruction work was the provision, wherever practicable, of central dividing strips with ornamental fencing to prevent indiscriminate 'U' turns and 'jay' walking. The policy continued of providing, whenever possible, for heavier pavements, better drainage, and for improved widths, alignments and superelevation of carriageways.

249. The Barber-Greene Paver-Finisher, which had arrived not long before the beginning of the year, had a notable effect upon the output and quality of resurfacing with bituminous carpets. This was reflected not only in the increased mileage of roads so treated, but in the increased demand for bituminous mixes from the quarries.

250. The following expenditure was incurred:

(1) New Roads $12,374,000 (2) Reconstruction & Improvements $11,205,000 (3) Maintenance $5,278,000 (4) Storm Damage $2,148,000 $31,005,000

Total expenditure was about $2 million less than for the previous year due largely to less storm damage, the cost of which was charged to (1) and (2) above in respect of work in progress, while minor repairs were included in (3), the figure against (4) covering only the more exceptional items.

Page 51

Page 51

Edit History

2026-05-11 21:14:13 · NVIDIA / meta/llama-4-maverick-17b-128e-instruct
Live
View comparison
AI Proofread
ROADS OFFICE WORKS SECTION Chief Engineer (Acting), W. T. KNIGHT, A.M.I.C.E., A.M.I.Mun.E., M.Inst.Q. Assistant Chief Engineers, B. W. JAMES, B.Sc. (Eng.), A.M.I.C.E. W. C. BELL, A.M.I.C.E. GENERAL 246. The severe rainstorms in May and Typhoon 'Mary' in June caused extensive damage to the Colony's roads, interrupted new construction and delayed re-surfacing. Several bridges in the New Territories sustained severe scouring to the abutments and piers and damage to wing-walls. 247. In addition to 9 miles of new construction, works included the reconstruction of 18 miles, the surfacing or resurfacing in bituminous carpet of 70 miles and the surface dressing of 25 miles of existing roads. 248. One feature of reconstruction work was the provision, wherever practicable, of central dividing strips with ornamental fencing to prevent indiscriminate 'U' turns and 'jay' walking. The policy continued of providing, whenever possible, for heavier pavements, better drainage, and for improved widths, alignments and superelevation of carriageways. 249. The Barber-Greene Paver-Finisher, which had arrived not long before the beginning of the year, had a notable effect upon the output and quality of resurfacing with bituminous carpets. This was reflected not only in the increased mileage of roads so treated, but in the increased demand for bituminous mixes from the quarries. 250. The following expenditure was incurred: (1) New Roads $12,374,000 (2) Reconstruction & Improvements $11,205,000 (3) Maintenance $5,278,000 (4) Storm Damage $2,148,000 $31,005,000 Total expenditure was about $2 million less than for the previous year due largely to less storm damage, the cost of which was charged to (1) and (2) above in respect of work in progress, while minor repairs were included in (3), the figure against (4) covering only the more exceptional items. Page 51 Page 51
Baseline (Original)
ROADS OFFICE WORKS SECTION Chief Engineer (Acting), W. T. KNIGHT, A.M.I.C.E., A.M.I.Mun.E., M.Inst.Q. Assistant Chief Engineers, B. W. JAMES, B.Sc. (Eng.), A.M.I.C.E. W. C. BELL, A.M.I.C.E. GENERAL 246. The severe rainstorms in May and Typhoon 'Mary' in June caused extensive damage to the Colony's roads, interrupted new con- struction and delayed re-surfacing. Several bridges in the New Territories sustained severe scouring to the abutments and piers and damage to wing-walls. 247. In addition to 9 miles of new construction, works included the reconstruction of 18 miles, the surfacing or resurfacing in bituminous carpet of 70 miles and the surface dressing of 25 miles of existing roads. 248. One feature of reconstruction work was the provision, wherever practicable, of central dividing strips with ornamental fencing to prevent indiscriminate 'U' turns and ‘jay' walking. The policy continued of providing, whenever possible, for heavier pavements, better drainage, and for improved widths, alignments and superelevation of carriageways. 249. The Barber-Greene Paver-Finisher, which had arrived not long before the beginning of the year, had a notable effect upon the output and quality of resurfacing with bituminous carpets. This was reflected not only in the increased mileage of roads so treated, but in the increased demand for bituminous mixes from the quarries. 250. The following expenditure was incurred: (1) New Roads (2) Reconstruction & Improvements (3) Maintenance (4) Storm Damage $12,374,000 11,205,000 5,278,000 2,148,000 $31,005,000 Total expenditure was about $2 million less than for the previous year due largely to less storm damage, the cost of which was charged to (1) and (2) above in respect of work in progress, while minor repairs were included in (3), the figure against (4) covering only the more exceptional items. 51
2026-05-11 21:14:13 · Baseline
View content

ROADS OFFICE

WORKS SECTION

Chief Engineer (Acting),

W. T. KNIGHT, A.M.I.C.E., A.M.I.Mun.E., M.Inst.Q. Assistant Chief Engineers,

B. W. JAMES, B.Sc. (Eng.), A.M.I.C.E.

W. C. BELL, A.M.I.C.E.

GENERAL

246. The severe rainstorms in May and Typhoon 'Mary' in June caused extensive damage to the Colony's roads, interrupted new con- struction and delayed re-surfacing. Several bridges in the New Territories sustained severe scouring to the abutments and piers and damage to wing-walls.

247. In addition to 9 miles of new construction, works included the reconstruction of 18 miles, the surfacing or resurfacing in bituminous carpet of 70 miles and the surface dressing of 25 miles of existing roads.

248. One feature of reconstruction work was the provision, wherever practicable, of central dividing strips with ornamental fencing to prevent indiscriminate 'U' turns and ‘jay' walking. The policy continued of providing, whenever possible, for heavier pavements, better drainage, and for improved widths, alignments and superelevation of carriageways. 249. The Barber-Greene Paver-Finisher, which had arrived not long before the beginning of the year, had a notable effect upon the output and quality of resurfacing with bituminous carpets. This was reflected not only in the increased mileage of roads so treated, but in the increased demand for bituminous mixes from the quarries.

250. The following expenditure was incurred:

(1) New Roads

(2) Reconstruction & Improvements

(3) Maintenance

(4) Storm Damage

$12,374,000

11,205,000

5,278,000

2,148,000

$31,005,000

Total expenditure was about $2 million less than for the previous year due largely to less storm damage, the cost of which was charged to (1) and (2) above in respect of work in progress, while minor repairs were included in (3), the figure against (4) covering only the more exceptional items.

51

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.