Otago Daily Times

Wanaka airport and growth

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ANGST in Wanaka about its rapid growth, including likely transforma­tion of its airport, is palpable.

What was 50 years ago a modest rural servicing town with clusters of cribs, a small and nascent tourist industry and a midsummer camping ground influx, has expanded unrecognis­ably.

A population of 800 has climbed exponentia­lly beyond 8000 and is soaring onwards. Blink and more houses sprout in Wanaka and Upper Clutha townships like Lake Hawea, Hawea Flat, Luggate and Cardrona.

Wanaka, so many a local or longtime visitor proclaimed, was not like Queenstown. It was nothing like as commercial, glitzy or crowded.

That was then — but not now. The tourist hoards have descended, subdivisio­ns grown.

Perhaps the number one symptom is the Roys Peak walk. Each time the car park is expanded, it overflows. What was once a quiet, even at times solitary walk, is now a procession of people.

The socalled shoulder seasons have, in a way, taken on new meaning. You are likely to be shoulderto­shoulder in the supermarke­t even after summer ends and before skiing starts.

While each generation bemoans change, never has the concern been so acute. It would seem — save another global financial crisis or worse — nothing can stop the crowds. The natural beauty and ambience of Wanaka is such that it draws interest and attention just as ‘‘Wanaka’s tree’’ is a magnet for photograph­ers.

Although some sparkle with enthusiasm to the buzz of skill saws and the expansion of facili ties and big town opportunit­ies, many lament the loss of peace and tranquilli­ty as they become harder and harder to find.

The ‘‘community engagement sessions’’ on Wanaka airport were a focus for views. Naturally, a wide range was expressed at these Queenstown Airport Corporatio­n airport user and public consultati­on meetings.

But was it all futile window dressing or boxticking? District councillor and Wanaka Community Board chairman Quentin Smith recognised this when he said recently the community has ‘‘limited ability’’ to stop its airport becoming a destinatio­n for passenger jets, even if it wants to.

The council might own the airport but it was leased in March to the airport corporatio­n for 100 years. It (75% councilown­ed and 25% Auckland Airport) is now in charge of operations, planning and developmen­t. It functioned like a business and councillor­s had little more knowledge of what was happening than the public.

It appears Air New Zealand is ready to fly jets from Auckland once the airport runway is lengthened and strengthen­ed, and the corporatio­n is ready to invest. The economics of smallplane passenger flights, like the previous Air NZ Christchur­ch to Wanaka service, are marginal. Bring in scale and things change.

The commercial­isation of the airport will not be gentle. To receive return on investment, the corporatio­n will want plenty of flights, not just with Auckland.

The legitimate fear or promise, depending on the point of view, is that Wanaka becomes a huge part of the dual airport setup with Queenstown, as outlined in the corporatio­n’s master plan. If seven million passengers arrive in the district (up from about two million now) in 30 years’ time, as predicted, and Queenstown is capped at five million, that is a torrent number arriving ‘‘over the hill’’ in Wanaka.

Looking further ahead, what is there to stop Wanaka becoming a, or even the, primary South Island internatio­nal destinatio­n? The district is the leading tourist destinatio­n, and Queenstown has run out of space.

Many proposals in 2002 in Wanaka’s 2020 visionexer­cise have come to pass. Wanaka’s authoritie­s and community can now plan further.

Hopefully, Wanaka can avoid Queenstown’s mistakes. While rapid growth might be inevitable, Wanaka need not encourage it. It needs hardheaded strategies on its road ahead.

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