Ashburton Hospital Ashburton Hospital is a 74-bed hospital based at 28 Elizabeth Street, Ashburton. The hospital provides medical, surgical, radiology and maternity care. It admits about 5,000 inpatients each year as well as seeing 2,600 day patients and 15,000 outpatients. It is run by
Canterbury District Health Board and the rural health service employed approximately 550 staff in 2021.
Transport Rail The
Main South Line railway line runs through the centre of town. and the
refreshment room was converted from table- to counter-service to save staff and increase the speed of service in 1944. The rooms closed in 1970, when the
Southerner service was established. The service ceased on 10 February 2002, but the station is still used for freight, as some barley continues to be sent by train to maltings at
Marton. The station's container terminal is in use on weekdays. The station building was demolished in 2013 after several
resource consent hearings. Funding from the New Zealand government and the Ashburton District Council for a new rail freight hub was provided in October 2021. The project will move the rail container terminal from the centre of Ashburton to Fairton. The project is expected to be complete by the end of 2022, and has an estimated cost of $14M. It should help ease congestion on the roads in the centre of Ashburton.
Road State Highway 1 runs through the centre of Ashburton and provides the main road connection between
Christchurch and
Dunedin. The highway crosses the Ashburton river via a bridge that is the only direct route across the river for local traffic and State Highway 1 traffic.
SH1 Ashburton river bridge The bridge on State Highway 1 crossing the Ashburton river was opened in 1931, and was the first wide bridge in New Zealand. On 1 June 2021, a severe flood in the Ashburton river caused scouring damage to piers supporting the bridge, and the bridge deck subsided, leading to a temporary closure. At the time of closure, there were no other routes for SH1 traffic wanting to go north or south across the Ashburton river, because all inland routes were also closed. On 3 June 2021, the bridge was re-opened for heavy traffic during daylight hours only, and all restrictions were lifted on 10 June. The Ashburton District Council has been trying to obtain funding from
Waka Kotahi (New Zealand Transport Agency) for a second bridge for local traffic and to provide more resilience to the road network. In 2021, the additional bridge was planned to be built in 15 years time.
Other routes State Highway 77 starts in Ashburton and heads towards
Methven, and then through the
Rakaia gorge and on to
Darfield.
Air The
Ashburton Airport is located near the town centre and is an active light (
GA and
Microlight) aviation hub and home of the Mid Canterbury Aero Club (GA) and Ashburton Aviation Pioneers. In October 2021, the future of how the airport was being operated was being debated as managing the challenge of increasing aviation activity with the desire to develop the land around the airport could cause conflict due to the potential of noise pollution from the airport.
Electricity Electricity first arrived in Ashburton in 1908. This was supplied by a 30 kilowatt generator powered by a steam traction engine. In 1921 the Ashburton Electric Power Board was established and by 1927 it had 2804 customers. The local
electricity distribution network company was formed as Electricity Ashburton in 1995 after a reorganisation of the Ashburton Electric Power Board into a commercial company. It adopted its current trading name EA Networks in late 2012. It is unique among New Zealand electricity distribution companies in that it is the only company that is a
cooperative, whereby shares in the company are owned by electricity consumers connected to its network. EA Networks owns and operates the subtransmission and distribution network in the Ashburton District . Outside the Ashburton township (pop. 17,700), most of the district is rural with a high usage of
irrigation, with the associated water pumps responsible for more than 85 percent of EA Networks' peak summer demand. ==Education==