The New Zealand Herald

Residents vent anger at hotel plan

- Lincoln Tan

Residents living on Elizabeth St, off Dominion Rd in the Auckland suburb of Mt Eden, are desperate to stop a five-storey hotel from being built on their street.

Auckland Council this week said a resource consent applicatio­n had been lodged for a 60-room hotel to be constructe­d at 409 Dominion Rd, which is at the corner of Dominion Rd and Elizabeth St.

The resource consent for the $20 million hotel was lodged on March 23, 2017, under Jiayao Capital Investment­s Limited.

Peter Clark, 62, an aviation journalist who lives on the street, said residents were angry about the plans.

“The concept of what I’ve seen of this hotel looks like a shipping container storage site, and this is really worrying to me,” Clark said.

“This is a beautiful area . . . it’s a heritage area, but they’re allowing this ugly monstrosit­y going up here and we virtually have no say.”

Clark said the concerns were that the entrance to the hotel would be on Elizabeth St and this would cause major traffic and parking problems.

“We have major problems here with parking . . . and now we’re going to have this.”

Clark said residents had been caught by surprise.

“We only found this out by a story in the New Zealand Herald and a lot of people are very, very concerned, and very, very worried about what’s taking place,” he said.

Clark said the properties on the central Mt Eden street were worth more than $1.5m. “Who knows what having this hotel here will do to property values,” he added.

Resident Nikki Lovrich also expressed dismay and anger with the hotel plans.

“The sheer scale of the building does not fit in at all with the rest of the houses on the street,” she said.

Matthew Morton, 48, a project manager, said more than 20 residents turned up for a meeting at his house on Thursday night. “People are angry, and the meeting was to discuss ideas on what we could do to stop the developmen­t,” he said.

Eric Paoyu Chou, the general manager of the project, said the developers would be abiding by New Zealand’s “strict laws and regulation­s. From design, constructi­on, layout and almost every step of the way, we will work with top New Zealand designers, builders and consultant­s”.

Chou said the hotel, to be named Hotel One, would bring global independen­t travellers to the Dominion Rd area.

Mark White, Auckland Council’s manager central resource consenting, said the applicatio­n was currently being processed.

“As we have only recently received the applicatio­n, a decision on whether it will be publicly notified for submission­s is yet to be made,” White said.

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