The New Zealand Herald

Village opponents lodge court appeal

Community lobby group taking action against Ryman plan on North Shore

- Anne Gibson property editor anne.gibson@nzherald.co.nz

Opponents of a controvers­ial new Ryman Healthcare retirement village on Auckland’s North Shore have lodged an appeal in the Environmen­t Court to halt the developmen­t.

Iain Rea, a neighbour of the proposed six-level Wakakura developmen­t and member of the Ngataringa Bay Action Group, yesterday announced the move against Ryman, which has a market capitalisa­tion of $4.4 billion.

Rea said consent granted for the developmen­t of a large retirement complex on land on Ngataringa Bay would be appealed in the Environmen­t Court by community lobby group Devonport Peninsula Precincts Society.

Simon Challies, Ryman’s chief executive and managing director, said: “We are obviously disappoint­ed the consent for our new Ngataringa Rd village has been appealed, but we remain absolutely committed to building in Devonport.

“We prepared a robust proposal which received consent, and we are confident we can work through the issues raised in the appeal,” he said.

“We have had huge interest in the village from potential residents, and they were delighted when we obtained consent.”

Ryman was last month granted consent to build the village between Devonport and Takapuna on a 4.2ha site between Lake Rd and Ngataringa Rd overlookin­g Ngataringa Bay.

Rea explained the reaction to the non-unanimous independen­t hearing commission­ers’ decision issued last month. “This appeal follows the split decision favouring the developmen­t by two of three commission­ers when reviewed against Auckland’s Unitary Plan. The dissenting commission­er and urban planner, Dave Serjeant, noted that ‘intensific­ation will generate significan­t change . . . [with] likely no public input.’ “He further wrote, ‘It would be unfortunat­e if the interpreta­tion [of the Unitary Plan] were seen to sup-

We remain absolutely committed to building in Devonport. Simon Challies

port the proliferat­ion of large, bulky buildings that have little or no variation in built form’,” Rea said.

“On the Devonport peninsula there are six large sites zoned as precincts. . . . what happens here could set a precedent allowing hundreds of apartments in large five-storey blocks with no public say.

“This should be of concern, not just to the residents of TakapunaDe­vonport but all Aucklander­s. There is no question. The decision must be appealed.”

Ryman got consent to build 195 independen­t living apartments, a 120 hospital- or care-beds facility and 78 serviced suites on the site.

Plans show blocks up to six levels high, with basement carparking. The big vacant site once had Navy housing on it but is now owned by Ngati Whatua’s Whai Rawa commercial arm and Ryman has struck a 150-year lease of the land.

Challies defended the project last year and said the community needed the retirement village.

Local objections included the appearance of the project, its bulk, scale, traffic generation, its lack of relationsh­ip to surroundin­gs and absence of effective landscapin­g to mitigate visual dominance.

 ?? Picture / Jason Oxenham ?? Local objections to the retirement village complex at Ngataringa Bay include the project’s scale.
Picture / Jason Oxenham Local objections to the retirement village complex at Ngataringa Bay include the project’s scale.
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