The New Zealand Herald

Council to test car-free Queen St

Vote unanimous for trial of pedestrian friendly strategy in inner-city Auckland

- Simon Wilson

Trials will begin next year to turn central Auckland into a car-free zone. The Auckland Council voted unanimousl­y to adopt a strategy called Access for Everyone, which calls for all non-essential vehicles to be kept out of the inner city. As part of the strategy, officials were told to come up with a plan for trials.

Mayor Phil Goff says trials will start next year, based on a plan to be presented in March.

The approach involves an “open streets” approach, which means opening the streets to pedestrian­s and other users by closing them to traffic. It will also be trialled in other urban centres around Auckland.

Goff told councillor­s: “There are over 100,000 people working in the central city. Hotel blocks are soaring into the sky. Pedestrian numbers are doubling every few years. We have to do this. This is a lovely vision and an absolute necessity.”

Councillor Chris Darby noted that when the City Rail Link opens in 2024 it will double the number of people arriving in the central city by rail. Planners believe the Government’s light rail proposals will add a further 10,000 people per hour in peak times.

Public transport capacity is expected to rise by 370 per cent over next 10 years. Greater pedestrian numbers, along with growth in bicycle and scooter numbers, are already forcing a rethink in the way the central city streets are used.

“There is nothing more powerful than a vision with necessity driving it,” said Goff.

Councillor Penny Hulse said the change is happening already. “I want to cheer loudly about this,” she said.

“And before social media starts calling us car-hating councillor­s, when was the last time people drove on Queen St? Most people have stopped doing that.”

The strategy came from the council’s Auckland Design Office, but it has no timetable and many councillor­s had concerns over slow progress.

Closing Queen St to cars was included in the City Centre Masterplan of 2012, but nothing has happened.

Design office manager Ludo Campbell-Reid told councillor­s that with all the constructi­on underway “there may not be much we can do downtown for a while”.

But Goff asked him: “What have you got planned over the next 12 months for the central city and suburban areas for open street trials?”

Campbell-Reid responded that it was a “big, complicate­d issue” and there was no schedule.

“But there’s a lot of things happening already. Next weekend we have the Santa Parade, when Queen St will be closed. Why not keep it closed?”

He added that the agency with the authority to close streets was Auckland Transport.

Darby said: “We are urging you, giving you licence to go and do things. Not just to ponder an idea.”

Emily Reeves of the Central City Residents Group earlier told the meeting: “As residents we wonder why it takes so long for anything to be achieved. We would just ask that you find a solution and do it quickly.”

Darby proposed that Campbell-Reid report back with a schedule of trials for March.

It is not the first time a carless Queen St has been tested. In the 1970s the council closed part of the street to traffic, but the experiment failed.

Pippa Coom, chair of the Waitemata Local Board, told the meeting that back then there was “ferocious

opposition”, led by the Herald, which declared that “a modern city buzzes with the sound of motorcars”.

Queen St now has 13 times as many pedestrian­s as cars.

“Now,” Coom said, “the city buzzes with the sound of people.”

The strategy divides the inner city into eight “cells” around the central Queen St valley. The proposal is that vehicles will be able to enter a cell, and leave it the way they entered, but not move from one to the next.

The inner city will be a “place to go to, not a place to go through”.

The plan specifical­ly addresses the issue of service and delivery. In general, it’s expected service vehicles would be allowed in the central city at designated times, especially overnight and in the mornings.

There would be more loading bays for them. Couriers would also be encouraged to use e-cargo bikes in the inner city, along with “delivery lockers”. Similar to post office boxes, and widely used overseas, they allow couriers to deliver to secure sites, for residents and others to pick up their goods from.

Councillor Cathy Casey said she was “excited, very excited”, but she wanted to know what they should say to businesses who believed they would lose customers if there was no parking outside the shop.

Campbell-Reid said: “There are already more people coming into the city by public transport than by car. And that will double with the CRL [central rail link]. Businesses will have far more customers.”

Several councillor­s worried that all the focus would be on the central city, at the expense of other centres.

Darby suggested they could start their open streets trials right, across the city, with celebratio­ns and festival activities in Otahuhu, Albany, the city centre and everywhere.

Campbell-Reid said: “This is not a war on the car. People like to polarise these conversati­ons. This is about giving people real choices.”

 ?? Photo / File ?? The carless plan for Queen St, here shown in an artist’s impression, is about giving people choices, says design office manager Ludo Campbell-Reid.
Photo / File The carless plan for Queen St, here shown in an artist’s impression, is about giving people choices, says design office manager Ludo Campbell-Reid.
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