Weekend Herald

Tower tenants will have a fast ride to the top of the town

- Anne Gibson

Tenants in the upper levels of Auckland’s new Commercial Bay tower will get to and from work in New Zealand’s fastest lifts, travelling at a kneeshakin­g 8 metres a second and costing $15 million.

Six lifts on the southern side of the developmen­t’s PwC Tower are glazed from floor to ceiling, making for an even more spectacula­r journey above Auckland’s skyline at the rate of twoand-a-half floors a second.

Blair Johnston, Warren and Mahoney’s lead architect on the project, said the Schindler 7000 Series lifts from Switzerlan­d served mid-rise and high-rise floors in the 40-level, 180m tall waterfront block.

They are New Zealand’s most sophistica­ted lifts, he said.

“The height of the building requires separate groups of lifts for the high-rise and mid-rise floors. The high-rise lifts travel at 8m per second, the mid-rise at 4.5m per second,” he said. “The high-rise lifts are the fastest in New Zealand while the mid-rise lifts are the fastest machineroo­m-less midrise lifts in the country.”

Tenants travelling from the public reception area on Level 7 to the tower’s top office floor on the 39th level will get there in just 12 seconds or so.

The high-rise lifts don’t stop at the first 14 floors, saving time for tenants higher up, said Johnston.

“The speed of the lifts directly improves waiting times at busy periods and improves the client experience.”

The new lifts are technicall­y different from most others in the country.

“The machine series, types of ropes used and the shape of the car is different.

“That deals with the piston effect created by lift cars travelling past each other at high speed.”

But unless you’re a tower tenant or authorised visitor to the block owned and developed by Precinct Properties, forget joy riding.

“All lifts are only accessible via swipe card. There is also a concierge in the sky lobby who will help visitors,” Johnston said.

Previously, New Zealand’s fastest lifts were at 188 Quay St in the former PwC Tower, Johnston said, travelling at 6m per second. That block is also owned by Precinct.

New Zealand’s biggest corporate relocation starts this weekend, as the first tenants move into the tower, which can take 3200 people, making it the single largest concentrat­ion of office workers in New Zealand. Jarden and PwC are some of the first to shift.

PwC comes from Precinct’s tower opposite; Jarden from Precinct’s ANZ Centre; MinterElli­sonRuddWat­ts from the Lumley Tower on Shortland St; Chapman Tripp from Precinct’s ANZ Centre; DLA Piper from 205 Queen St; Marsh from Robt Jones’ SAP Tower at 151 Queen St; and Alvarium from Precinct’s Zurich House.

Game developer RocketWerk­z has taken the top floors, levels 38 and 39.

Six escalators in two banks of three are at the main entrancewa­y in a triple-height lobby on the Lower Albert St/Customs St corner.

For speed, more escalators will travel up in the mornings and more down in the afternoons.

Johnston said the ground floor had 20 men’s showers and 19 women’s showers for tenants, 100 men’s lockers and 94 women’s and secure storage for 190 bikes.

The difference in space for men and women is because of the floor configurat­ion.

A public reception area, the new Spectra bar cafe and relaxed seating areas are in the level-7 sky lobby which opens out to the landscaped open-air sky terrace.

“It’s a generous space that will be filled with life by day and night, to achieve a vibrant extension of the workplace,” Johnston said of the sky lobby, which has granite floors and sandstone walls.

Windows from Germany have a graduated tint from the bottom up to reduce solar heat.

 ?? Photo / Sylvie Whinray ?? Lead architect Blair Johnson shows off the Commercial Bay tower before the tenants move in.
Photo / Sylvie Whinray Lead architect Blair Johnson shows off the Commercial Bay tower before the tenants move in.

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