The New Zealand Herald

$1.4b housing plan for Okura is thrown out

Environmen­t Court rejects Todd Property's 1000-house proposal near Long Bay

- Jamie Gray

The Environmen­t Court has knocked back Todd Property’s proposal for a $1.4 billion, highdensit­y housing developmen­t at Okura on Auckland’s North Shore. Todd Property, one of New Zealand’s biggest property developers, owns a 130ha rural block outside Auckland’s northern city limits.

The Okura block is near Vaughans Rd, North Shore, near the Okura Estuary. The land is north of Todd’s 2000-residence Long Bay project.

At issue was the position of the rural urban boundary near the Okura Estuary — a controvers­y that has been running since 2003.

Todd Property’s Okura Holdings had previously sought permission from Auckland Council for a 1000-house developmen­t on the land but was barred.

The company took the issue to the Environmen­t Court.

The Environmen­t Court, in its decision, said the Okura Estuary was an important habitat for avifauna in the Auckland and the wider coastal environmen­t.

“We have found that it is inevitable that increased human activity in the vicinity of the estuary arising from urbanisati­on of the Okura Holdings Ltd (OHL) land will have significan­t adverse effects on bird life in the estuary,” the court said.

The court said it had considered Auckland Council’s Unitary Plan objectives and policies relevant to marine and birdlife.

“We were not confident that the OHL proposal would protect marine ecology from adverse effects as required by the objectives and policies and have identified the need to take a precaution­ary approach in that regard.

“We have found that the OHL proposal does not protect avifauna in the estuary as required by the objectives and policies,” it said.

The court said the proposal would have had “significan­t adverse effects” on natural character and landscape values of the site and surroundin­g environmen­t.

“We have identified that in their assessment of effects of the OHL proposal on natural character and landscape values, OHL and its advisers failed to take a broad overview of the aggregated qualities of the estuary and what we somewhat cautiously identified as the distinctiv­e sense of place and special character qualities of the estuary and its high vulnerabil­ity to potential adverse effects of urban developmen­t.”

Todd Property said it was reviewing the court’s decision.

Auckland councillor Chris Darby, who chairs the planning committee, said it was “entirely fitting” that the proposed Okura developmen­t was deemed not to be appropriat­e by the court.

“This decision is further evidence that we will defend the rural-urban boundary to ensure that there is good breathing space around the city limits of Auckland for people and nature,” he said.

The Long Bay Okura Great Park Society said the decision was a “big win for the people of New Zealand”.

Pat Baskett, the society’s convenor, said: “Today’s decision gives the Marine Reserve and its wildlife some important protection but there are still threats from runoff from developmen­t and the Auckland Council must get tougher on this.”

In April, the Environmen­t Court stopped a housing project from going ahead at Crater Hill, on the edge of the Manukau Harbour.

The court declined an appeal by the Self Family Trust and adjacent landowners against Auckland Council’s Unitary Plan, which zones Crater Hill and Pukaki Peninsula as rural land outside the Rural Urban Boundary.

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