Otago Daily Times

High, or pie, in the sky?

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TALK of a gondola from the middle of Queenstown to the airport should not be summarily dismissed as pie in the sky.

While the chances of such a project ever proceeding must be low, Queenstown is a unique place with unique challenges. As it confronts its booming future, the movers and the shakers must be prepared to think beyond the obvious and the convention­al.

The town and the Wakatipu Basin have had much more of a ‘‘cando’’ and entreprene­urial spirit than most places. If such a gondola were to be constructe­d, it would be here.

It is now 51 years since passengers first rode the Skyline gondola up Bob’s Peak above the town. When it celebrated its 50th anniversar­y last year, it was estimated 17 million had taken the trip.

When it was launched in 1967 many sceptics thought the southern hemisphere’s first detachable gondola would flounder. How wrong they were.

The latest gondola idea would not happen soon, if at all, even under the most optimistic forecasts. Physical work is not, it is understood, contemplat­ed before the 2030s.

The two potential roadblocks, and they are massive, are the economics/logistics and environmen­tal/consent issues.

Would the current gondola have won permission these days to cut a swath through public land and trees above Queenstown? And would a building jutting out at the top over the town be allowed? Imagine the opposition to a new structure going over Queenstown Hill. Imagine the visual impact as well as the effect on the privacy of every home near the gondola line.

Entry to central Queenstown is either along Frankton Rd, which is already as wide as possible, or round the back via Arthurs Point. There have to be ways to bring everincrea­sing numbers of people — staff, residents and tourists — into town and probably also from the airport. At least, a gondola and light rail are options to consider.

The expanded Wakatipu Basin $2 bus service has had some success, but is still hamstrung by the limits on its service as it struggles to find sufficient drivers. Other longterm options could be less labour intensive.

If the gondola idea is going to work for residents as well as tourists, as it must, the price to ride must be relatively low. That implies heavy use, efficiency and commuter subsidies, most likely through the NZ Transport Agency and the Otago Regional Council and perhaps the Queenstown Lakes District Council.

Gondolas are used successful­ly in some parts of the world, and a Queenstown operation could include terminals, such as train stops. Possibly, more of Queenstown Hill could be opened up for housing if people living there could travel to town via the gondola. Neverthele­ss, the scale of the challenges are apparent.

The history of gondola proposals in the South is bleak. The socalled Milford Skyrail, a Skyline Enterprise­s and Ngai Tahu plan through the Caples Valley, met sustained and widespread opposition and died. Consent was granted in 2008 for gondolas from Cardrona up to the Snow Farm and Snow Park and from the Matukituki Valley to the Treble Cone skifield. Both ran into the Global Financial Crisis and have gone nowhere.

The Porter Group, Queenstown, has a plan for a $50 million, 10km, gondola from Remarkable­s Park Town Centre in Frankton to the Remarkable­s ski area base building. Who knows when that might progress to the consent stage? Another possibilit­y is from Cardrona up the other side of the valley to the ski area there. In early dream territory is the idea of a gondola up the steep, direct and short route from Arrowtown to Mt Cardrona.

A gondola from Queenstown’s CBD to the airport seems most unlikely. But given the speed of growth there, it would be a bold call to say there was no chance.

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