Weekend Herald

Chamberlai­n Park sports fields tipped to cost $15m

Board surprised at works estimate but says sum worst-case scenario

- Dubby Henry

Two new sports fields planned as part of the Chamberlai­n Park Golf Course redevelopm­ent could cost up to $15 million, official documents have revealed.

But the local board chairman says that cost is a “worst-case scenario” based on buying in fill, and the final cost is likely to be much lower.

The 18-hole golf course in Mt Albert is owned and operated by Auckland Council. The Albert-Eden Local Board wants to redevelop the course to make it open to the wider community — cutting the golf course to nine holes and adding an aquatic centre, playground, cycleways and two artificial turf sports fields.

But an investment summary presented to the Albert-Eden Local Board last year showed the sports field costs ballooning due to the difficulty of building on the rolling terrain, which lies over volcanic rock.

Filling the gaps and building flat platforms for the two fields to sit on could cost $7m, the summary said.

The fields themselves are expected to cost another $8m. By comparison, two artificial sports fields at College Rifles Rugby Club in Remuera cost $2m to build in 2009.

Auckland Council has agreed to pay the $8m from its sport investment and developmen­t fund, as part of plans to make more of the city’s sports fields usable during winter.

But late last year the board was still seeking funding for the underlying works, according to the documents obtained by the lobby group Save Chamberlai­n Park under official informatio­n laws.

The local board was “surprised” at the high cost of the proposed earthworks, according to an email sent last October from local board

member Graeme Easte to an unnamed person.

The person responded that the main cost would be paying for about 66,000sq m of fill, which would cost $3.3m at $50 per cubic metre.

However, board chairman Peter Haynes told the Weekend Herald using fill from earthworks at projects like the Central Intercepto­r and Central Rail Link would significan­tly cut the cost of the sports fields.

“It is extremely unlikely that we’d ever pay that much money . . . in fact we are saving a huge amount of money if we put sports fields on Chamberlai­n Park because we won’t have to buy other land.”

The board wants the golf course reconfigur­ed and a new driving range built by 2020, and the sports fields and path network completed by 2023. Those dates may be pushed out as the redevelopm­ent plans are under judicial review at the High Court.

Save Chamberlai­n Park chairman Geoff Senescall said $15m would be a “ridiculous­ly huge expenditur­e” for two sports fields which he believed were not needed in the area.

“What checks and balances are there in the system that allows the council to green light funding for sporting resources that are not needed — and at the expense of a well used and needed public golf course?” Senescall said.

 ?? Peter Haynes ??
Peter Haynes

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