Otago Daily Times

Call for carfree Octagon

- GEORGE BLOCK george.block@odt.co.nz

AS residents and visitors soaked up the sun in the Octagon in Dunedin before last night’s final Ed Sheeran concert, some business owners were calling for the area to be permanentl­y pedestrian­ised.

Vault 21 owner Andre Shi said patrons of his lower Octagon bar loved the expanded outdoor space, and the temporaril­y carfree Sheeran hub should become a yearround fixture.

‘‘Making it permanent would be amazing.

‘‘There’s a very good vibe in the Octagon.’’

Mr Shi said Dunedin should look to the success of pedestrian­ised shopping areas in Queenstown and Wellington. His vision for the Octagon included large awnings extending from bars and restaurant­s, together with outdoor heaters to improve the area’s ambience during the cooler months.

‘‘It looks ice cold in winter at the moment.’’

Albar manager Grant Benson agreed, saying the Dunedin City Council had done a ‘‘wonderful job’’ adding seating and vegetation to the pedestrian­ised area outside the Stuart St bar.

‘‘It should be closed permanentl­y,’’ he said.

Out and About mobile cafe and burger bar owner Terry Pleydell agreed the space should be permanentl­y closed to traffic. However, he was disappoint­ed by the lack of events and live music in the Octagon on the Easter weekend evenings.

‘‘It could have really rocked.’’ Nelson concertgoe­r Nick Edwards, found relaxing on a beanbag in the Octagon yesterday, said the carfree hub was ‘‘fantastic,’’ but it did not quite give Dunedin the edge on his hometown.

‘‘Nothing beats Nelson.’’ Cr Aaron Hawkins, a supporter of a carfree space in the lower Octagon and upper Stuart St, said he was pleased by the success of the pedestrian­ised Sheeran hub over the weekend.

However, he was concerned the council’s 10year central city plan did not include funding for the Octagon.

His concerns were shared by Cr David BensonPope, chairman of the council’s planning and environmen­t committee, who said the lack of funding had to be addressed.

He had long supported transformi­ng the Octagon, together with parts of Stuart and George Sts, into pedestrian­only zones.

‘‘We need to get on with it.’’ Claire Grenfell, the coowner of lower Octagon bar The Craic, also supported making the Octagon a pedestrian­only space, but perhaps only during summer.

‘‘There’s not enough people in winter.’’

Sue Todd Antiques owner Sue Todd had reservatio­ns and expected she would have to close her business if the area became permanentl­y pedestrian­ised.

Mrs Todd suggested using automatic retractabl­e bollards as a compromise, to close the area to traffic as needed for familyfrie­ndly events.

But she predicted a pedestrian­ised area would become dangerous and unpleasant during rowdier occasions like big rugby games.

‘‘This concert is not a fair representa­tion,’’ she said.

DCC strategy and governance general manager Sandy Graham said making the area carfree for the Sheeran concerts was seen as a trial run by the council, but she would not be drawn on the likelihood of a permanent change.

‘‘That’s a decision for the politician­s.’’

 ?? PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN ?? A view of the future? The central carfree hub in the lower Octagon and upper Stuart St before the final Ed Sheeran concert yesterday.
PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN A view of the future? The central carfree hub in the lower Octagon and upper Stuart St before the final Ed Sheeran concert yesterday.
 ??  ?? Andre Shi
Andre Shi

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand