Stadium New Zealand
, often called the Waterfront Stadium
, was the provisional name for a national stadium proposed for Auckland's waterfront to host the 2011 Rugby World Cup.
The possible choice of the location for the stadium was widely contested in politics and public opinion. Considerations as to the effects on the amenity of the waterfront, the effect on ports operations and the high costs of construction led to an abandonment of the proposal in late November 2006.
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WATERFRONT STADIUM TICKETS
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Background
Stadium site
The
New Zealand Government commissioned research on an alternative stadium to
Eden Park for hosting the
2011 Rugby World Cup. The proposal was to build a new stadium seating 60,000 on the
Auckland waterfront, instead of at the previously mooted site,
Eden Park, which is about 3.5 kilometres away from Auckland CBD. The preferred waterfront site was over Marsden wharf. However,
Ports of Auckland, who use the land as a shipping container terminal, expressed concern that construction would not be finished in time for the
2011 Rugby World Cup, and that the new site would remove land important for the continuing function of the country's largest commercial port.
Alternative sites
Alternative sites such as
Carlaw Park,
North Harbour Stadium and
Mt Smart Stadium fell out of favour with the Government, leading to questions concerning the political motivations for such strong support for the waterfront stadium.
The Government claimed Carlaw Park was not be a suitable location as several hundred trees would need to be felled, there would be a requirement for three hectares of land from the
Auckland Domain and because parts of the proposed site are privately owned with existing plans. The Government also claimed there was inadequate space to accommodate people leaving the stadium.
[1] North Harbour Stadium was also initially dismissed for transport reasons.
[2]
The stadium was estimated to cost NZ$497 million by the Government,
[3] although it was stated that this figure could have risen, with stadium projects historically having substantial overruns (later quoted in the New Zealand Herald as up to 30% or more).
[4] The cost was a source of controversy, with various figures having been quoted by different sources.
[5] The Government and construction industries sources noted that all costings of large projects are unreliable, and that redevelopment of
Eden Park also faces uncertainties.
[6] The Government proposed that to assist funding, levies on hotels, motels and backpacker lodges might be introduced, along with promotions run by the
New Zealand Lotteries Commission.
Decision process
Differing votes
On November 10, 2006, the New Zealand Government announced its preference for a waterfront stadium to be built over Marsden and Captain Cook wharves. The Government asked the
Auckland City Council and the
Auckland Regional Council to determine which proposal they each preferred, with only the waterfront stadium or a redeveloped Eden Park as options. A two-week consultation of Auckland residents was arranged, and a deadline of November 24, 2006 was set for the Auckland City Council and the Auckland Regional Council to give their respective preference.
[7] The deadline was widely criticised as undemocratic blackmail, though some commentators defended it as being necessary to move along the process.
On
November 22 2006, an injunction was proposed to the
High Court in Auckland by five residents of
Auckland City against the Waterfront Stadium, stating that enough time was not given for the decision to be made between the Eden Park Stadium and the new Waterfront Stadium. The injunction was rejected an hour before the Auckland City Council met to decide its preference for a venue. The High Court ruled that there would be adequate future opportunities to fight any venue decision.
[8]
- In a 5 hour meeting on the night of November 23, the Auckland City Council gave support to the waterfront proposal by a 13-7 vote. However they qualified their assent by wanting the stadium to be "substantially east" of the Marsden Wharf/Captain Cook location preferred by the government, cutting more deeply into port lands, but also keeping views from Britomart unobstructed. [9]
- On November 24, the Auckland Regional Council unanimously voted against supporting the construction of the stadium at the waterfront (mainly due to its effects on port operations), opting instead to lend their support to an upgrade of Auckland's current rugby venue, Eden Park. [10]
Outcome
On November 27, the New Zealand Government, taking into consideration the votes of the
Auckland City Council and the
Auckland Regional Council and numerous public submissions, decided to drop the Stadium New Zealand proposal in favour of the redevelopment of
Eden Park.
[11]
Cabinet asked that more work be done on the design, funding and governance of Eden Park and that North Harbour Stadium be considered as a reserve option.
See also
- 2011 Rugby World Cup
- Carlaw Park
- Eden Park
- North Harbour Stadium
- Ports of Auckland
References
- ''Stadium decision: Mallard dismisses Carlaw Park proposal'' - ''The New Zealand Herald'', Monday 13 November, 2006
- ''Cullen: Eden Park not best for World Cup'' - ''The New Zealand Herald'', Thursday 9 November, 2006
- ''Government prefers waterfront stadium'' - Trevor Mallard on Friday 10 November, 2006 (from the NZ Parliament homepage)
- ''$500m pricetag may be just the start, warns Cullen'' - ''The New Zealand Herald'', Tuesday 14 November, 2006
- ''Waterfront stadium to cost $900m plus'' - ''Scoop'', Thursday 16 November, 2006
- ''Stadium decision: Dollars, not time, the issue'' - ''The New Zealand Herald'', Thursday 16 November, 2006]
- ''Mallard ready to go with waterfront stadium'' - ''The New Zealand Herald'', Friday 10 November, 2006
- ''Stadium decision: Injunction fails to stop councils deciding tonight'' - ''The New Zealand Herald'', Thursday 23 November, 2006
- ''Council votes 'yes' to waterfront stadium'' - ''The New Zealand Herald'', Friday 24 November, 2006
- ''Quandary for Mallard after ARC votes No'' - ''The New Zealand Herald'', Friday 24 November, 2006
- ''It's Eden Park, Government says'' - ''The New Zealand Herald'', Monday 27 November, 2006