The waterfront bull-rush battle amongst Ports of Auckland (POAL), Auckland Council (and its family of Council-Controlled Organisations), property investors, and advocates for public space and sustainable transport, is the latest chapter in Auckland’s long history of public planning battles mocked as “the Auckland disease”: a symptom of severe growing pains, vigorous vested interests, and increasingly de-regulated public institutions.
The battle goal has remained the same: control over economic or social benefits from waterfront land reclaimed from the seabed over the last one hundred years.
By 1973 Ports of Auckland’s predecessor, Auckland Harbour Board (AHB) had reclaimed 160 hectares of Waitemata Harbour seabed adjacent to Auckland’s burgeoning central business district. Today POAL operates Auckland’s port on about 55 hectares of this land and much of the rest has been vested to Auckland City Council for public roads and streets, and to utility operators for public works like railways, bus and train stations, the central post office and gasworks.
Such uses of reclaimed seabed appear to be strongly in the public interest, however other transactions have principally benefited AHB. As Roland O’Regan, Chairman of Wellington’s Harbour Board in 1974 observed: “..some Harbour Boards seeking to protect themselves against sudden falls in income…have vested large areas of seabed in themselves so they have the power to create income earning land...”. Auckland Harbour Board persuaded Parliament to grant it some 5,000 acres of seabed in 1875, while a few years later Wellington Harbour Board only gained rights to specific seabed areas relating to specific works. O’Regan went on, “Auckland Harbour Board not only has large areas of seabed vested in it but receives $1,000,000/annum from residential rents.”
Sour grapes perhaps, but this is the basis of much of the Auckland disease, and also why Wellington’s redeveloped waterfront is much more successful as a public attraction than Auckland’s central waterfront is today, and is shaping up to be in future.
From the mid-1970’s Wellington Harbour Board and Wellington City Council entered binding agreements and generally worked together “to implement the Concept Plan to the fullest extent in its provision of open spaces and recreational facilities for the use and enjoyment of the public which would not otherwise be achievable.”
Auckland Harbour Board’s behaviour stands in stark contrast. In 1965, increasing rent potential to more than $1.4 million/annum, AHB doubled ground floor area entitlements in its plans for the Auckland Downtown site. This led to the controversial 20 storey tower now known as the HSBC building and to an unsuccessful public space named Queen Elizabeth Square. And since 1997 POAL has pocketed more than $250 million from the sale of Queens Wharf, Princes Wharf leases, Viaduct Harbour land and Wynyard Quarter.
Accounts setting out revenues that publicly-owned POAL earns from its waterfront real estate business, let alone from importing cars, and the extent to which these revenues subsidise its container handling charges, are all hidden from public scrutiny.
Things might have been different if Auckland City Council had stood up to Auckland Harbour Board when it had the opportunity, and might still be different if Auckland Council accorded proper weight to its Local Government Act duties to ratepayers. Instead both institutions stand guilty of being bought off. Auckland City Council opposed the dominating POAL supported Hilton Hotel development on Princes Wharf until it was promised a rate revenue stream from activities that would be located outside its jurisdiction above the seabed. One might have expected Auckland Council to replace Queen Elizabeth Square with equivalent green space within the city fabric, but instead wants the silver on offer to compensate Precinct for carparks lost by the CRL tunnel; is attracted by the promise of development levies and rate revenues from expanded commercial development; has made vague unbudgeted promises to free up Queens Wharf and lengthen Captain Cook for cruise ships; and offers the public a cheap deal “letting us have access” to streets and wharf spaces that we already own!
This cheap public land swap deal is especially cheap because any public money that might be paid to POAL can immediately be translated into a dividend so the Council gets its money back.
Combined with POAL’s noisy claims it can built wharf extensions to Bledisloe and demolish part of Marsden Wharf all without public notification the casual and unconsulted sale of Queen Elizabeth Square simply add insult to past public injuries.
Wellington’s waterfront development has not all been plain sailing however. Controversially its Regional Council granted consent for a Hilton Hotel on Wellington’s Queens Wharf which was challenged in the Environment Court by the Wellington Civic Trust and Wellington Waterfront Watchdog. The judge ruled that the adverse effects on the public enjoyment of wharf space adjacent to the hotel should not be permitted. The hotel has not been built and the status and quality of Wellington waterfront public spaces and amenities has been further protected and upheld. Auckland sorely needs the same sort of coordinated, principled and organized civic unrest to hold Ports of Auckland and Auckland Council institutions to account.
The remarkable link between intrinsic human qualities such as behavior, conduct, and demeanor - and the external built environment has been recognized for years. Cities shape their citizens. Yet, this link is given little consideration in the design of Auckland’s redeveloping waterfront. The plans we see have public spaces that are shared with buses, cars and a light-rail line; spaces that are partly under private control and subject to surveillance; instead of public spaces that act simply as locations for urban interaction.
Places which are only “accessible” to citizens rather than controlled by them through use, are not truly public places.
Auckland has the opportunity now to design and create its own particular waterfront city form. One that is the shaping environment for people who grow and live here. One which actively addresses urban relationships that are overdue for repair including the city’s relationship with the Waitemata Harbour, sea and its ecosystems; the city’s relationship and engagement with Maori and Pacific culture; the built city’s relationship with shaded and leafy green spaces; the central city’s public relationship with its own citizens.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Monday, March 2, 2015
Diagnosis and Prescription for Auckland’s Dis-ease
The waterfront bull-rush battle amongst Ports of Auckland (POAL), Auckland Council (and its family of Council-Controlled Organisations), property investors, and advocates for public space and sustainable transport, is the latest chapter in Auckland’s long history of public planning battles mocked as “the Auckland disease”: a symptom of severe growing pains, vigorous vested interests, and increasingly de-regulated public institutions.
The battle goal has remained the same: control over economic or social benefits from waterfront land reclaimed from the seabed over the last one hundred years.
By 1973 Ports of Auckland’s predecessor, Auckland Harbour Board (AHB) had reclaimed 160 hectares of Waitemata Harbour seabed adjacent to Auckland’s burgeoning central business district. Today POAL operates Auckland’s port on about 55 hectares of this land and much of the rest has been vested to Auckland City Council for public roads and streets, and to utility operators for public works like railways, bus and train stations, the central post office and gasworks.
Such uses of reclaimed seabed appear to be strongly in the public interest, however other transactions have principally benefited AHB. As Roland O’Regan, Chairman of Wellington’s Harbour Board in 1974 observed: “..some Harbour Boards seeking to protect themselves against sudden falls in income…have vested large areas of seabed in themselves so they have the power to create income earning land...”. Auckland Harbour Board persuaded Parliament to grant it some 5,000 acres of seabed in 1875, while a few years later Wellington Harbour Board only gained rights to specific seabed areas relating to specific works. O’Regan went on, “Auckland Harbour Board not only has large areas of seabed vested in it but receives $1,000,000/annum from residential rents.”
Sour grapes perhaps, but this is the basis of much of the Auckland disease, and also why Wellington’s redeveloped waterfront is much more successful as a public attraction than Auckland’s central waterfront is today, and is shaping up to be in future.
From the mid-1970’s Wellington Harbour Board and Wellington City Council entered binding agreements and generally worked together “to implement the Concept Plan to the fullest extent in its provision of open spaces and recreational facilities for the use and enjoyment of the public which would not otherwise be achievable.”
Auckland Harbour Board’s behaviour stands in stark contrast. In 1965, increasing rent potential to more than $1.4 million/annum, AHB doubled ground floor area entitlements in its plans for the Auckland Downtown site. This led to the controversial 20 storey tower now known as the HSBC building and to an unsuccessful public space named Queen Elizabeth Square. And since 1997 POAL has pocketed more than $250 million from the sale of Queens Wharf, Princes Wharf leases, Viaduct Harbour land and Wynyard Quarter.
Accounts setting out revenues that publicly-owned POAL earns from its waterfront real estate business, let alone from importing cars, and the extent to which these revenues subsidise its container handling charges, are all hidden from public scrutiny.
Things might have been different if Auckland City Council had stood up to Auckland Harbour Board when it had the opportunity, and might still be different if Auckland Council accorded proper weight to its Local Government Act duties to ratepayers. Instead both institutions stand guilty of being bought off. Auckland City Council opposed the dominating POAL supported Hilton Hotel development on Princes Wharf until it was promised a rate revenue stream from activities that would be located outside its jurisdiction above the seabed. One might have expected Auckland Council to replace Queen Elizabeth Square with equivalent green space within the city fabric, but instead wants the silver on offer to compensate Precinct for carparks lost by the CRL tunnel; is attracted by the promise of development levies and rate revenues from expanded commercial development; has made vague unbudgeted promises to free up Queens Wharf and lengthen Captain Cook for cruise ships; and offers the public a cheap deal “letting us have access” to streets and wharf spaces that we already own!
This cheap public land swap deal is especially cheap because any public money that might be paid to POAL can immediately be translated into a dividend so the Council gets its money back.
Combined with POAL’s noisy claims it can built wharf extensions to Bledisloe and demolish part of Marsden Wharf all without public notification the casual and unconsulted sale of Queen Elizabeth Square simply add insult to past public injuries.
Wellington’s waterfront development has not all been plain sailing however. Controversially its Regional Council granted consent for a Hilton Hotel on Wellington’s Queens Wharf which was challenged in the Environment Court by the Wellington Civic Trust and Wellington Waterfront Watchdog. The judge ruled that the adverse effects on the public enjoyment of wharf space adjacent to the hotel should not be permitted. The hotel has not been built and the status and quality of Wellington waterfront public spaces and amenities has been further protected and upheld. Auckland sorely needs the same sort of coordinated, principled and organized civic unrest to hold Ports of Auckland and Auckland Council institutions to account.
The remarkable link between intrinsic human qualities such as behavior, conduct, and demeanor - and the external built environment has been recognized for years. Cities shape their citizens. Yet, this link is given little consideration in the design of Auckland’s redeveloping waterfront. The plans we see have public spaces that are shared with buses, cars and a light-rail line; spaces that are partly under private control and subject to surveillance; instead of public spaces that act simply as locations for urban interaction.
Places which are only “accessible” to citizens rather than controlled by them through use, are not truly public places.
Auckland has the opportunity now to design and create its own particular waterfront city form. One that is the shaping environment for people who grow and live here. One which actively addresses urban relationships that are overdue for repair including the city’s relationship with the Waitemata Harbour, sea and its ecosystems; the city’s relationship and engagement with Maori and Pacific culture; the built city’s relationship with shaded and leafy green spaces; the central city’s public relationship with its own citizens.
The battle goal has remained the same: control over economic or social benefits from waterfront land reclaimed from the seabed over the last one hundred years.
By 1973 Ports of Auckland’s predecessor, Auckland Harbour Board (AHB) had reclaimed 160 hectares of Waitemata Harbour seabed adjacent to Auckland’s burgeoning central business district. Today POAL operates Auckland’s port on about 55 hectares of this land and much of the rest has been vested to Auckland City Council for public roads and streets, and to utility operators for public works like railways, bus and train stations, the central post office and gasworks.
Such uses of reclaimed seabed appear to be strongly in the public interest, however other transactions have principally benefited AHB. As Roland O’Regan, Chairman of Wellington’s Harbour Board in 1974 observed: “..some Harbour Boards seeking to protect themselves against sudden falls in income…have vested large areas of seabed in themselves so they have the power to create income earning land...”. Auckland Harbour Board persuaded Parliament to grant it some 5,000 acres of seabed in 1875, while a few years later Wellington Harbour Board only gained rights to specific seabed areas relating to specific works. O’Regan went on, “Auckland Harbour Board not only has large areas of seabed vested in it but receives $1,000,000/annum from residential rents.”
Sour grapes perhaps, but this is the basis of much of the Auckland disease, and also why Wellington’s redeveloped waterfront is much more successful as a public attraction than Auckland’s central waterfront is today, and is shaping up to be in future.
From the mid-1970’s Wellington Harbour Board and Wellington City Council entered binding agreements and generally worked together “to implement the Concept Plan to the fullest extent in its provision of open spaces and recreational facilities for the use and enjoyment of the public which would not otherwise be achievable.”
Auckland Harbour Board’s behaviour stands in stark contrast. In 1965, increasing rent potential to more than $1.4 million/annum, AHB doubled ground floor area entitlements in its plans for the Auckland Downtown site. This led to the controversial 20 storey tower now known as the HSBC building and to an unsuccessful public space named Queen Elizabeth Square. And since 1997 POAL has pocketed more than $250 million from the sale of Queens Wharf, Princes Wharf leases, Viaduct Harbour land and Wynyard Quarter.
Accounts setting out revenues that publicly-owned POAL earns from its waterfront real estate business, let alone from importing cars, and the extent to which these revenues subsidise its container handling charges, are all hidden from public scrutiny.
Things might have been different if Auckland City Council had stood up to Auckland Harbour Board when it had the opportunity, and might still be different if Auckland Council accorded proper weight to its Local Government Act duties to ratepayers. Instead both institutions stand guilty of being bought off. Auckland City Council opposed the dominating POAL supported Hilton Hotel development on Princes Wharf until it was promised a rate revenue stream from activities that would be located outside its jurisdiction above the seabed. One might have expected Auckland Council to replace Queen Elizabeth Square with equivalent green space within the city fabric, but instead wants the silver on offer to compensate Precinct for carparks lost by the CRL tunnel; is attracted by the promise of development levies and rate revenues from expanded commercial development; has made vague unbudgeted promises to free up Queens Wharf and lengthen Captain Cook for cruise ships; and offers the public a cheap deal “letting us have access” to streets and wharf spaces that we already own!
This cheap public land swap deal is especially cheap because any public money that might be paid to POAL can immediately be translated into a dividend so the Council gets its money back.
Combined with POAL’s noisy claims it can built wharf extensions to Bledisloe and demolish part of Marsden Wharf all without public notification the casual and unconsulted sale of Queen Elizabeth Square simply add insult to past public injuries.
Wellington’s waterfront development has not all been plain sailing however. Controversially its Regional Council granted consent for a Hilton Hotel on Wellington’s Queens Wharf which was challenged in the Environment Court by the Wellington Civic Trust and Wellington Waterfront Watchdog. The judge ruled that the adverse effects on the public enjoyment of wharf space adjacent to the hotel should not be permitted. The hotel has not been built and the status and quality of Wellington waterfront public spaces and amenities has been further protected and upheld. Auckland sorely needs the same sort of coordinated, principled and organized civic unrest to hold Ports of Auckland and Auckland Council institutions to account.
The remarkable link between intrinsic human qualities such as behavior, conduct, and demeanor - and the external built environment has been recognized for years. Cities shape their citizens. Yet, this link is given little consideration in the design of Auckland’s redeveloping waterfront. The plans we see have public spaces that are shared with buses, cars and a light-rail line; spaces that are partly under private control and subject to surveillance; instead of public spaces that act simply as locations for urban interaction.
Places which are only “accessible” to citizens rather than controlled by them through use, are not truly public places.
Auckland has the opportunity now to design and create its own particular waterfront city form. One that is the shaping environment for people who grow and live here. One which actively addresses urban relationships that are overdue for repair including the city’s relationship with the Waitemata Harbour, sea and its ecosystems; the city’s relationship and engagement with Maori and Pacific culture; the built city’s relationship with shaded and leafy green spaces; the central city’s public relationship with its own citizens.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment