The New Zealand Herald

Locals reject tower

Bug Man among objectors claiming 7-storey build would do harm to area

- Bernard Orsman Super City

Auckland’s controvers­ial Unitary Plan is being tested by plans for a retirement village with buildings of up to seven storeys in the residentia­l neighbourh­ood of St Johns, where the height limit is three storeys.

Summerset Holdings Ltd has lodged a resource consent applicatio­n with Auckland Council to build a 344-unit retirement village on a 2.6ha site fronting St Johns Rd in the city’s eastern suburbs.

The mix of one, two and threebedro­om apartments and care facili- ties is made up of seven buildings of between three and seven storeys. The seven-storey building is 13.15m over the allowable height.

Summerset chief executive Julian Cook said the village would play a vital role in freeing up Auckland property at time when housing supply was under pressure and would help elderly people to stay living in the community. However the plan has attracted opposition from several current and former residents, including Ruud Kleinpaste — better known as “The Bug Man” — who is worried about its effect on the local bush. The applicatio­n has been publicly notified by council, prompting a big push back from the Orakei Local Board, concerned about the height infringeme­nts and worried about it creating a dangerous precedent for other developmen­ts. During the Unitary Plan process, the council stressed the mixed housing suburban and mixed housing urban zones — which cover the Summerset proposal — respec- tively provide for a mix of homes up to two and three storeys.

“The community has reason to expect a built environmen­t of no more than three storeys in this mixed housing urban zone area,” board chairman Colin Davis said in a submission.

The board said local boards across Auckland were facing challenges with ensuring developers comply with the generous provisions in the Unitary Plan, while acknowledg­ing some developers would test the plan’s interpreta­tion to get the best commercial return.

“The challenge for [planning] commission­ers . . . is when infringeme­nts are allowed to exceed the stated regulated heights, a precedent is set for other developers to then used to

justify their future projects,” the board said in a submission.

The Orakei Local Board said it was not opposed to developmen­ts provided they fully complied with all the standards in the Unitary Plan.

“This will have a significan­t adverse effect on the social, environmen­tal, economic and amenity values of the local community,” the board said.

A nearby resident from Ripon Cres, John Tinling, said in a submission the planned village is overly and oppressive­ly dominant in the local and wider St Johns and Meadowbank area and have an adverse effect on the neighbouri­ng St Johns Bush, designated a significan­t ecological area in the Unitary Plan.

Cook said the layout of the village has been carefully designed to make best use of the existing site, such as locating the taller buildings against the backdrop of St Johns Bush — a design principle endorsed by council’s urban design panel.

“The question of whether the height of buildings is appropriat­e is at the discretion of the independen­t commission­ers appointed to the upcoming resource consent hearing,” Cook said, saying there are many examples of similar taller buildings in residentia­l neighbourh­oods.

“We have designed the buildings with input from prominent architectu­ral and design consultant­s,” he said.

Kleinpaste wants to protect the St Johns Bush stream, which is home to whitebait, koura (freshwater crayfish) and the odd eel.

The ecologist, who lived next to St Johns Bush for 12 years, said there was no doubt in his mind that the proposed developmen­t “would annihilate the biodiversi­ty” of the bush stream, its wetlands and the aquatic habitats further below.

“Run-off and stormwater excess from hard surfaces will contaminat­e the stream system, especially in Auckland’s weekly ‘100-year’ floods,” Kleinpaste said.

Cook said there were plans to remove a very small number of trees, but Summerset was undertakin­g extensive weed removal and native replanting resulting in a net gain for the bush.

“Stormwater effects on St Johns Bush have been well mitigated and indeed improved from the existing situation by us diverting sheet and channel flows away from the edge of the bush,” he said.

The Orakei Local Board said if the applicatio­n was approved, it wanted the two tallest buildings lowered and reduced in bulk, developmen­t set back 10m from St John Bush to create ponds to hold stormwater during heavy rain, and large oak and karaka trees kept on the proposed site.

 ??  ?? The biggest buildings would be 13m over the height limit.
The biggest buildings would be 13m over the height limit.
 ??  ?? Ruud Kleinpaste
Ruud Kleinpaste
 ?? Source: aucklandco­uncil. Google Maps / Herald graphic ??
Source: aucklandco­uncil. Google Maps / Herald graphic

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