Otago Daily Times

The year we swelled to 130,000

Dunedin has moved from a city battling stagnation to one facing the challenges of growth, and 2018 has been a key year in that transforma­tion. David Loughrey looks back on a run of good news, and the big events that marked the year.

- david.loughrey@odt.co.nz

DUNEDIN entered 2018 after a year not without its periods of gloom. In February 2017 news broke that after years of speculatio­n and concern, the city’s Cadbury factory would finally close, leaving about 350 people facing an uncertain future.

The fallout of that news drifted into this year, when, in May, owner Mondelez announced the last link with the chocolate manufactur­er would end with a decision the Cadbury World attraction would close for good.

But by that time the city was already focusing on what was to come next for the Cadbury site, a $1.4 billion hospital build set to bring people and employment to a city already humming with activity.

And the hospital was only one story of a Dunedin in growth mode.

In the last year the city’s Forsyth Barr Stadium struck gold, with three Ed Sheeran concerts alone selling more than 100,000 seats, and netting the city $38 million.

And a feeling the city was swelling at the seams became more of a certainty, when Stats NZ gave the latest population figures at more than 130,000 for the first time.

But growth brings its own challenges, something the city will spend the next few years dealing with.

On May 4 the Otago Daily Times broke the news that two blocks of central Dunedin — including the Cadbury factory site and the block to the north — would be the site of the new hospital.

With the site chosen and the planned 2020 beginning of constructi­on getting rapidly closer, work began to get the city ready for a big influx of workers.

More than 1000 are expected to be needed, and in September, major industry players, government organisati­ons and others got together to deal with what is expected to be a serious shortfall in skilled labour.

That work will continue in the new year after the group was given government funding for a fulltime worker to organise the response.

In December the Government announced it planned to fasttrack part of the build, with an outpatient and day surgery building set to be completed, probably on the corner of St Andrew St and Cumberland St, by 2023.

Tenders are expected to go out in the new year for a main architect and an engineerin­g firm for the work.

The success of Forsyth Barr Stadium is another goodnews story of the year, one which saw some big gains for the city’s economy.

The three Ed Sheeran concerts filled the city to capacity when close to 70,000 came from outside Dunedin for the shows.

But there was plenty more on offer at the stadium this year.

Overall, eight major concerts pulled in more than 200,000 fans, many of them from outside the city.

Apart from Sheeran, there were performanc­es by Stevie Nicks and The Pretenders, Roger Waters, Robbie Williams and Pink.

The year of concerts finished last weekend when Shania Twain drew a crowd of 18,000.

Dunedin Venues chief executive Terry Davies said the economic return for the city for the year looked set to be worth $60 million; a ‘‘phenomenal’’ result.

In October, new figures showed Dunedin’s population had surged past 130,000 for the first time.

The estimated resident population figures released by Stats NZ showed the population had jumped by 1900 people, or 1.5%, to 130,700 in the year to June 2018.

That was on top of a similar increase, of 1800 people, in the previous year.

The news showed the decades of minimal growth the city had been experienci­ng were, perhaps, coming to an end.

But that issue brings its own challenges.

In November, a Mayor’s Taskforce for Housing report found 650 more social and community units were needed just to meet current demand.

Mayor Dave Cull said this week the city was ‘‘in pretty good heart’’.

Mr Cull said the most important aspect of the population rise was the age demographi­c within it.

The cohort that dominated the increase was the 1539 age bracket, which the city needed.

‘‘It’s not just about getting more people. What we wanted was a more balanced demographi­c in order to make the community sustainabl­e.

‘‘That’s the pleasing aspect of that.’’

Mr Cull was also confident the city was moving towards providing higherskil­led jobs.

‘‘I think it is happening.

‘‘I think it’s pretty significan­t that virtually everybody who was put off at Cadbury’s went somewhere they wanted to go by the time they were put off.’’

About 95% had either gone into new jobs or voluntaril­y retired.

‘‘That tells me there was a pretty healthy demand for reasonably skilled people.

‘‘They went out and got jobs.’’ Mr Cull said it was ‘‘a great relief’’ to have a timeframe for the hospital build, and certainty it would stay in central Dunedin.

But there would need to be work put in to provide housing for a rising population and bigger workforce coming to the city.

‘‘We already know that we’ve got quite steeply rising social housing needs.’’

The hospital would also affect both the community and the council in terms of the price it would have to pay for contracts for any constructi­on work it wanted done in a tight market.

‘‘We always think it’s a bit of a problem for a council when you haven’t got much growth.

‘‘Well, you have more challenges when you do have growth, because you’ve got to find funds to invest in the infrastruc­ture that’s needed.’’

 ?? PHOTO: INSTAGRAM ?? How would you feel . . . Ed Sheeran at Forsyth Barr Stadium.
PHOTO: INSTAGRAM How would you feel . . . Ed Sheeran at Forsyth Barr Stadium.
 ?? PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH ?? Evacuated . . . Residents watch from Mulford St, Concord, looking towards Burnside where a fire blazed, in January. About 100 firefighte­rs, 25 fire appliances and six helicopter­s managed to contain the huge blaze which incinerate­d several industrial buildings in a 25ha area of suburban Burnside. . About 100 homes were evacuated overnight at the height of the fire.
PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH Evacuated . . . Residents watch from Mulford St, Concord, looking towards Burnside where a fire blazed, in January. About 100 firefighte­rs, 25 fire appliances and six helicopter­s managed to contain the huge blaze which incinerate­d several industrial buildings in a 25ha area of suburban Burnside. . About 100 homes were evacuated overnight at the height of the fire.
 ?? PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN ?? Tragedy . . . A bouquet of flowers was left outside a firedamage­d property in Wesley St, South Dunedin, on January 22, where two people died. The house had been set alight. A 46yearold man, who has name suppressio­n, will be tried in March on two counts of murder and one of arson, after the bodies of South Dunedin couple Anastasia Margaret Neve (35) and David Ian Clarke (49) were found inside the property on January 22.
PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN Tragedy . . . A bouquet of flowers was left outside a firedamage­d property in Wesley St, South Dunedin, on January 22, where two people died. The house had been set alight. A 46yearold man, who has name suppressio­n, will be tried in March on two counts of murder and one of arson, after the bodies of South Dunedin couple Anastasia Margaret Neve (35) and David Ian Clarke (49) were found inside the property on January 22.
 ?? PHOTO: CHRISTINE O’CONNOR ?? Heartbroke­n . . . Family members and friends carry the body of Dunedin teenager AmberRose Rush to a hearse after her funeral, in February. A former doctor at Dunedin Hospital, Venod Skantha (30), has been charged with the murder of the 16yearold teenager, who was found dead in her Corstorphi­ne home on February 2.
PHOTO: CHRISTINE O’CONNOR Heartbroke­n . . . Family members and friends carry the body of Dunedin teenager AmberRose Rush to a hearse after her funeral, in February. A former doctor at Dunedin Hospital, Venod Skantha (30), has been charged with the murder of the 16yearold teenager, who was found dead in her Corstorphi­ne home on February 2.
 ?? PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH ?? Big business . . . About 1500 tourism industry representa­tives, including hundreds of overseas visitors who have a big influence on New Zealand’s $36 billion annual tourism spending, flocked to Dunedin in May for Tourism Industry Aotearoa’s Trenz event at the Edgar Centre. Described as ‘‘speed dating for business’’, the fourday event brought together hundreds of New Zealand tourism operators with 387 overseas buyers from 27 markets, including Australia, the United States, and Japan, and hundreds of stalls were set up at the Edgar Centre.
PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH Big business . . . About 1500 tourism industry representa­tives, including hundreds of overseas visitors who have a big influence on New Zealand’s $36 billion annual tourism spending, flocked to Dunedin in May for Tourism Industry Aotearoa’s Trenz event at the Edgar Centre. Described as ‘‘speed dating for business’’, the fourday event brought together hundreds of New Zealand tourism operators with 387 overseas buyers from 27 markets, including Australia, the United States, and Japan, and hundreds of stalls were set up at the Edgar Centre.
 ?? PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY ?? Wet November. . . Sandbags were used to protect shops in Mosgiel, and other properties in South Dunedin when extensive flooding hit the Taieri, pockets of Dunedin, and Roxburgh, Oamaru and Balclutha late last month. Dave Mitchell (right) and Tony Vaas were among those sandbaggin­g shops at Mosgiel.
PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY Wet November. . . Sandbags were used to protect shops in Mosgiel, and other properties in South Dunedin when extensive flooding hit the Taieri, pockets of Dunedin, and Roxburgh, Oamaru and Balclutha late last month. Dave Mitchell (right) and Tony Vaas were among those sandbaggin­g shops at Mosgiel.
 ?? PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN ?? Last bow . . . The curtain fell, and it was apparently a case of exit, pursued by an unsustaina­ble business model when the Fortune Theatre unexpected­ly announced its closure on May 1.
PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN Last bow . . . The curtain fell, and it was apparently a case of exit, pursued by an unsustaina­ble business model when the Fortune Theatre unexpected­ly announced its closure on May 1.
 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? New build . . . An artist’s impression of the new Dunedin Hospital.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED New build . . . An artist’s impression of the new Dunedin Hospital.

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