The Post

Plan for city’s ‘civic heart’ takes shape

- Erin Gourley

What’s hoped will become “the beating heart of the city” is taking shape, with a property developer selected to replace the council’s old office buildings in Te Ngākau Civic Square .

Precinct Properties – known for Commercial Bay and Wynyard Quarter in Auckland and the new Willis Lane food court and Bowen Campus in Wellington – has been selected as the leading tenderer for the site, councillor­s were told yesterday.

Te Ngākau Civic Square has been hit with a series of earthquake prone assessment­s over the past decade. The Town Hall, Central Library, Michael Fowler Centre, Municipal Office Building, City Gallery, Civic Administra­tion Building, former Capital E Building, City to Sea Bridge and the basement under the square are all earthquake prone.

Some structures, like the Town Hall, are in the process of redevelopm­ent; others, like the City to Sea Bridge, will probably be demolished.

The council voted last year to demolish the municipal office building and civic administra­tion building – traditiona­lly the council’s office space – and replace them with a new building.

Mayor Tory Whanau said in a statement the news was “a huge step forward in our collective work to restore the civic heart of the city”.

Selecting a private developer for the site meant the council could avoid the cost and risk of redevelopm­ent – “which we know can be challengin­g from our experience­s with the Town Hall”, Whanau said.

Councillor Iona Pannett said based on the artist’s impression­s she did not think the building was good enough for the space, but was told that the design was preliminar­y at this point.

“This will become the beating heart of the city again,” said chief operating officer James Roberts in the briefing to councillor­s.

The new building would have public spaces on the ground floor and first floor, but the details were still being confirmed. The council would be able to influence those spaces in its negotiatio­ns with Precinct Properties, Roberts said.

He expected there would be hospitalit­y businesses and a co-working space. Precinct was still deciding whether the upper floors would be commercial office space or a hotel.

The council’s hope that a new building on the site could be reopened by 2027, providing the toilets and hospitalit­y space which the Town Hall needs, was not possible according to the tenders they received for the empty site. “The conclusion we have come to as a team is that it is just not feasible,” Roberts said. Instead staff were looking at how the existing space in the Michael Fowler Centre could be used for those functions in the Town Hall.

The team was focused on keeping Town Hall costs low, Roberts said.

“The objective is to bring budget back and we’re working hard on that.”

Victoria University of Wellington had signed on to the library redevelopm­ent, agreeing to take space on the third and fourth floors.

Another building in Civic Square, the City Gallery, will have to close for earthquake strengthen­ing in 2025. The New Building Standard rating is just 20% because of brickwork in the internal walls.

Farzad Zamani, Te Ngākau programme manager, said the strengthen­ing would be a relatively straightfo­rward process of replacing masonry walls.

Zamani also said that improving green space in the square was being worked through, and would come back to council as part of a proposal for a larger redevelopm­ent of the space in June – which was also where details like the demolition of the City to Sea Bridge would appear.

Councillor­s will decide whether to enter negotiatio­ns with Precinct Properties at a meeting on Thursday next week.

 ?? ?? An artist’s impression of the new civic building that will replace the civic administra­tion building and municipal office building in Te Ngākau Civic Square.
An artist’s impression of the new civic building that will replace the civic administra­tion building and municipal office building in Te Ngākau Civic Square.
 ?? WELLINGTON CITY COUNCIL ?? One of the latest artist’s impression­s of what the city’s Te Matapihi Central Library will look like when redevelopm­ent is complete in mid-2026.
WELLINGTON CITY COUNCIL One of the latest artist’s impression­s of what the city’s Te Matapihi Central Library will look like when redevelopm­ent is complete in mid-2026.
 ?? COLLETTE DEVLIN ?? The municipal office building (left) and civic administra­tion building (red building on the right) will be demolished and replaced with a new developmen­t by Precinct Properties.
COLLETTE DEVLIN The municipal office building (left) and civic administra­tion building (red building on the right) will be demolished and replaced with a new developmen­t by Precinct Properties.

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