Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Dirty Politics in Downtown Auckland

There has been a lot of interest in this posting I did about the non-notified Westfield resource consent for a 41 storey tower at the corner of Custom Street and Lower Albert Street obtained in 2008, and which Precinct Properties now owns along with its other property holdings at the site. You can read NZ Herald on the proposed building - and view a picture which is from the original 2008 application - here.

That 2008 permit would have lapsed in April 2013. But it didn't.

The Extension Process

What this posting is about is the process undertaken by Auckland Council and Westfield in 2011 to change the conditions of consent in the original permit, by inserting an extension to the tower permit out to 29th April 2018.

The chronology for this process is:
  • 3rd August 2011, application to modify Westfield Tower resource consent conditions lodged
  • 22nd August 2011, resolution grants the application to extend the consent out to 29 April 2018
Pretty quick. How many other consent applications get processed in this sort of timeframe?
But then, it wasn't notified, so there were no objections to deal with. Easy peasy.

The application for the extension begins with this reference to the relevant section of the RMA:


You can read there the tests that need to be passed for granting an extension.

The application argues that Westfield has done some detailed design work since consent was granted, and has approached the market to assess interest in the proposed commercial/office space. However, because of the GFC, Westfield argues, many construction projects were put on hold, and there was accordingly not enough time to get the leasing deals done, and the building built by April 2013. It also argued:


Apart from the spelling error this looks pretty tentative: "...have been actively negotiating...", "...termination clauses in most current leases...". And this is three and a half years after the consent was granted in 2008.

So what about the matter of approval. Apart from other building owners in the area, across Custom Street, and suchlike, there is the matter of the Britomart Rail tunnel proposal. This is very interesting....


Look at the words starting para 2: "Westfield was unaware of the tunnel proposition when the decision was taken to invest in the proposed scheme, and seek consent for the redevelopment of the site."

The Original Application

When I read these words, I decided to look back at the original resource consent application (April 2008). In the Auckland City Council planner's report about the application we find this para in a section discussing whether ARTA should be notified (or not) about the Westfields application to build the tower:

And there is this text in the planning officer report:


So we see here, in the original 2008 application planning report, that not only had the CEO of ARTA been advising Auckland City Council about the Britomart tunnel, but that ARTA had referred to "a dialogue it has established with the applicant (Westfield)", and that there had been media coverage about the tunnel project.

So how true is the statement: "Westfield was unaware of the tunnel proposition when the decision was taken to invest in the proposed scheme, and seek consent for the redevelopment of the site."....?

Interestingly, a chronology of events provided by the applicant in support of the extension, says this:


 Clearly ARTA was concerned that it was not officially notified about Westfield's original resource consent application, and that Auckland City Council must have supported the decision NOT to notify ARTA. What this all meant of course, that Westfield could obtain a resource consent for a 41 storey tower, without notification, and without taking into account the possibility of the rail tunnel.

It could thus claim to be first. First up, best dressed.

Concluding Assessment - Dirty Politics

Basically Westfield got its shit together in cahoots with Auckland City Council to ram through a 41 storey resource consent application, but was thrown off track by the GFC, and couldn't keep its shit together in time (5 years) to build it. In the meantime Auckland did get its shit together, the Supercity was formed along with Auckland Transport, which is a requiring authority by the way, and it has applied for the tunnel designation. I'd say to Westfield: tough. You win some, you lose some.

Question: does the timing of the extension application predate the Britomart Tunnel designation application?

And then we get to the final part of the test that needs to be satisfied:


This application to extend the permit was being considered in August 2011. Auckland Council would have been in existence for almost a year. I wonder how much was out there in the public domain about the Auckland Plan, about the rail plan, about the Britomart Rail tunnel project?

You'd have to say, if you were being a fair and reasonable person, that there were a lot of good reasons for NOT granting this extension.The commissioner decision to grant the extension is less than a page long. Man!

To finish this post I'll remind you why consent was needed in the first place in 2008. And this is according to Westfield's original application:


You can see the extent of effects - even without considering the Britomart Rail tunnel, and without considering the traffic impacts on bus movements in Lower Albert - let alone when a bus interchange is located there.

Sure "life goes on" and we can't always wait for good planning, but in my view this whole thing stinks from a consenting point of view. Lack of public notification gives an added stench.

Talk about dirty politics.

3 comments:

larry of puhoi said...

Mmmm ... Is it correct that you have received NO! comments feedback from this post Joel? Because, I have been waiting to see since the item was first posted before I "opined".

I have also given the material to another reliable source to "air"... same result, zilch.

So what do we have here then? Is this not a matter that Aucklanders should be vitally interested/energized about? It sure looks like it.

While urban-city development is a subject outside my normal field the "DP in DA" post Britomart case study confirms my concerns about Auckland Council in general.

It amazes me that matters such as these, (add to this the AC finances/rates/culture/expenditures/debt issues) are usually ignored by Joe Public or are merely stoutly defended ... by AC and its PR hacks.

True public interest issues, unless they can be packaged into a sexy soundbite get lost in the MSM and Twitter-sphere.

Really serious debate, where professionals with independent views can test the full range of options is at present virtually non-existent.

But could help be on its way? The AC legislation calls for a 2015 AC "Performance Review".

Here will at least be an opportunity to contribute to the AC's future role and actions.

The first five years of the AC have plainly not worked, lets hope the Terms of Reference for the upcoming review allow the opportunity to fully confront the issues of major pubic interest.

The Britomart 41 story building "Dirty Politics" proposal would be one good place to start.

But judging from the zero reaction to your item Joel ...

Does anyone out there really give a damn?

larry@kauriglen.co.nz

Anonymous said...

If you believe the process was so flawed and/or corrupt as you have suggested, you could always have the decision judicially reviewed by the High Court.

I would also note you have also made a basic mistake about what a "plan" or "proposed plan" is in terms of s125. Those examples you listed are not actually plans or proposed plans for the purposes of the RMA and are entirely irrelevant in making a determination under s125. You also seem to be blurring the lines between calling yourself a planner and acting as an advocate. I don't think this does the profession any benefits.

L SJ Herbert said...

Keep at it Joel, QE II will go down as yet another Auckland debacle , both in it's conception and it's eventual demise.

Larry asks, "does anyone give a damn?".

Yes and no.

Kiwi expats, 1 million and counting.

"Anonymous" asks "if you believe the process was so flawed and/or corrupt".

How could a decision to expose the city to a 20 million dollar bill, unnecessarily, be anything but flawed?

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11322376

To say nothing about how stupid it is to be losing priceless downtown space for a population we want to increase ( apparently ).

Sell QE II? How about we buy all Precincts properties, level them and create a park. That's a liveable city.

Honestly , who cares about corrupt? This city and/or country practises incompetence on a scale to make it entirely unnecessary.

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Dirty Politics in Downtown Auckland

There has been a lot of interest in this posting I did about the non-notified Westfield resource consent for a 41 storey tower at the corner of Custom Street and Lower Albert Street obtained in 2008, and which Precinct Properties now owns along with its other property holdings at the site. You can read NZ Herald on the proposed building - and view a picture which is from the original 2008 application - here.

That 2008 permit would have lapsed in April 2013. But it didn't.

The Extension Process

What this posting is about is the process undertaken by Auckland Council and Westfield in 2011 to change the conditions of consent in the original permit, by inserting an extension to the tower permit out to 29th April 2018.

The chronology for this process is:
  • 3rd August 2011, application to modify Westfield Tower resource consent conditions lodged
  • 22nd August 2011, resolution grants the application to extend the consent out to 29 April 2018
Pretty quick. How many other consent applications get processed in this sort of timeframe?
But then, it wasn't notified, so there were no objections to deal with. Easy peasy.

The application for the extension begins with this reference to the relevant section of the RMA:


You can read there the tests that need to be passed for granting an extension.

The application argues that Westfield has done some detailed design work since consent was granted, and has approached the market to assess interest in the proposed commercial/office space. However, because of the GFC, Westfield argues, many construction projects were put on hold, and there was accordingly not enough time to get the leasing deals done, and the building built by April 2013. It also argued:


Apart from the spelling error this looks pretty tentative: "...have been actively negotiating...", "...termination clauses in most current leases...". And this is three and a half years after the consent was granted in 2008.

So what about the matter of approval. Apart from other building owners in the area, across Custom Street, and suchlike, there is the matter of the Britomart Rail tunnel proposal. This is very interesting....


Look at the words starting para 2: "Westfield was unaware of the tunnel proposition when the decision was taken to invest in the proposed scheme, and seek consent for the redevelopment of the site."

The Original Application

When I read these words, I decided to look back at the original resource consent application (April 2008). In the Auckland City Council planner's report about the application we find this para in a section discussing whether ARTA should be notified (or not) about the Westfields application to build the tower:

And there is this text in the planning officer report:


So we see here, in the original 2008 application planning report, that not only had the CEO of ARTA been advising Auckland City Council about the Britomart tunnel, but that ARTA had referred to "a dialogue it has established with the applicant (Westfield)", and that there had been media coverage about the tunnel project.

So how true is the statement: "Westfield was unaware of the tunnel proposition when the decision was taken to invest in the proposed scheme, and seek consent for the redevelopment of the site."....?

Interestingly, a chronology of events provided by the applicant in support of the extension, says this:


 Clearly ARTA was concerned that it was not officially notified about Westfield's original resource consent application, and that Auckland City Council must have supported the decision NOT to notify ARTA. What this all meant of course, that Westfield could obtain a resource consent for a 41 storey tower, without notification, and without taking into account the possibility of the rail tunnel.

It could thus claim to be first. First up, best dressed.

Concluding Assessment - Dirty Politics

Basically Westfield got its shit together in cahoots with Auckland City Council to ram through a 41 storey resource consent application, but was thrown off track by the GFC, and couldn't keep its shit together in time (5 years) to build it. In the meantime Auckland did get its shit together, the Supercity was formed along with Auckland Transport, which is a requiring authority by the way, and it has applied for the tunnel designation. I'd say to Westfield: tough. You win some, you lose some.

Question: does the timing of the extension application predate the Britomart Tunnel designation application?

And then we get to the final part of the test that needs to be satisfied:


This application to extend the permit was being considered in August 2011. Auckland Council would have been in existence for almost a year. I wonder how much was out there in the public domain about the Auckland Plan, about the rail plan, about the Britomart Rail tunnel project?

You'd have to say, if you were being a fair and reasonable person, that there were a lot of good reasons for NOT granting this extension.The commissioner decision to grant the extension is less than a page long. Man!

To finish this post I'll remind you why consent was needed in the first place in 2008. And this is according to Westfield's original application:


You can see the extent of effects - even without considering the Britomart Rail tunnel, and without considering the traffic impacts on bus movements in Lower Albert - let alone when a bus interchange is located there.

Sure "life goes on" and we can't always wait for good planning, but in my view this whole thing stinks from a consenting point of view. Lack of public notification gives an added stench.

Talk about dirty politics.

3 comments:

larry of puhoi said...

Mmmm ... Is it correct that you have received NO! comments feedback from this post Joel? Because, I have been waiting to see since the item was first posted before I "opined".

I have also given the material to another reliable source to "air"... same result, zilch.

So what do we have here then? Is this not a matter that Aucklanders should be vitally interested/energized about? It sure looks like it.

While urban-city development is a subject outside my normal field the "DP in DA" post Britomart case study confirms my concerns about Auckland Council in general.

It amazes me that matters such as these, (add to this the AC finances/rates/culture/expenditures/debt issues) are usually ignored by Joe Public or are merely stoutly defended ... by AC and its PR hacks.

True public interest issues, unless they can be packaged into a sexy soundbite get lost in the MSM and Twitter-sphere.

Really serious debate, where professionals with independent views can test the full range of options is at present virtually non-existent.

But could help be on its way? The AC legislation calls for a 2015 AC "Performance Review".

Here will at least be an opportunity to contribute to the AC's future role and actions.

The first five years of the AC have plainly not worked, lets hope the Terms of Reference for the upcoming review allow the opportunity to fully confront the issues of major pubic interest.

The Britomart 41 story building "Dirty Politics" proposal would be one good place to start.

But judging from the zero reaction to your item Joel ...

Does anyone out there really give a damn?

larry@kauriglen.co.nz

Anonymous said...

If you believe the process was so flawed and/or corrupt as you have suggested, you could always have the decision judicially reviewed by the High Court.

I would also note you have also made a basic mistake about what a "plan" or "proposed plan" is in terms of s125. Those examples you listed are not actually plans or proposed plans for the purposes of the RMA and are entirely irrelevant in making a determination under s125. You also seem to be blurring the lines between calling yourself a planner and acting as an advocate. I don't think this does the profession any benefits.

L SJ Herbert said...

Keep at it Joel, QE II will go down as yet another Auckland debacle , both in it's conception and it's eventual demise.

Larry asks, "does anyone give a damn?".

Yes and no.

Kiwi expats, 1 million and counting.

"Anonymous" asks "if you believe the process was so flawed and/or corrupt".

How could a decision to expose the city to a 20 million dollar bill, unnecessarily, be anything but flawed?

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11322376

To say nothing about how stupid it is to be losing priceless downtown space for a population we want to increase ( apparently ).

Sell QE II? How about we buy all Precincts properties, level them and create a park. That's a liveable city.

Honestly , who cares about corrupt? This city and/or country practises incompetence on a scale to make it entirely unnecessary.