The New Zealand Herald

Changes shock in wealthy suburbs

- Bernard Orsman

Residents in the wealthy suburbs along Tamaki Drive are gobsmacked at plans to rezone their traditiona­l single-house properties for more intensive housing.

The latest maps for the new city rulebook show big zoning changes in suburbs such as Orakei and Glendowie, less than six months after a similar proposal was dumped by councillor­s following a public uproar.

The mansions in Paritai Dr, which sell for millions of dollars, have lost their single-house status and can be replaced with as many two-storey townhouses as developers can squeeze on to large sections.

It’s a similar story along the northern slopes of St Heliers Bay Rd — provision for two- and three-storey apartments and townhouses where large and expensive houses fit comfortabl­y in manicured gardens.

The hearings panel making final recommenda­tions on the Unitary Plan has recommende­d a 22 per cent reduction in the single-house zone and a 42.6 per cent cut in the central isthmus, including the Orakei ward.

Orakei Local Board chairwoman Desley Simpson said people were feeling a bit shell-shocked and gobsmacked at the latest proposals.

“The wholesale removal of the single-house zone from our ward, especially for the likes of Glendowie where residents never had a chance to have a say, feels very undemocrat­ic,” said Simpson.

The wholesale removal of the single-house zone from our ward, especially for the likes of Glendowie where residents never had a chance to have a say, feels very undemocrat­ic. Orakei Local Board chairwoman Desley Simpson

It showed the lack of democracy in the Unitary Plan process that put forward a proposed plan for feedback and residents were so removed from the final version, she said.

St Heliers-Glendowie Residents Associatio­n member Robert Johnston said the latest proposal would increase housing density but not contribute to affordabil­ity one iota because any developmen­t was going to be upmarket and expensive.

“The major beneficiar­ies will be property developers,” he said.

Johnston said there was no provision for providing more schools and upgrading sewerage, roads, parks and public transport.

Instead of intensifyi­ng a comfortabl­e, low-rise suburb such as Glendowie with no town centre or regular public transport to speak of, it made more sense to intensify Glen Innes, Panmure and Ellerslie where there is a rail corridor, Johnston said.

“The whole thing has been absolutely devoid of any democratic process,” he said.

 ?? Picture / Dean Purcell ?? Robert Johnston says the zoning proposal will not contribute to affordabil­ity and will benefit mostly property developers.
Picture / Dean Purcell Robert Johnston says the zoning proposal will not contribute to affordabil­ity and will benefit mostly property developers.

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