Weekend Herald

Chaos now, but this will soon be NZ’s Madison Ave

Australian deveopers see the potential of Auckland’s Albert St, writes Catherine Smith

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In the chaos of Auckland CBD’s CRL tunnel excavation, it is hard to imagine Albert St as the charming people-friendly precinct for inner city workers and residents that the mayor and his planners envision. But when the tunnel is covered over by the middle of next year, and entrances for the new Aotea Station are inserted around Victoria and Wellesley streets, a new centre of gravity for the city will emerge.

Remarkably, it’s taken Australian property developers to spot the potential of this Albert St precinct. With its row of Edwardian buildings that back o nto the refurbishe­d St Patrick’s Square around the cathedral, the block between Wyndham and Swanson Streets fit the criteria of interestin­g with-design potential for Dean Rzechta, who heads Ninety Four Feet with his brother Jonty. Dad Henry, who’s been in property for more than 35 years, is chairman of the company Dean named in honour of his first career in profession­al basketball (the length of the court is 94 feet).

The Melbourne-based company, founded 10 years ago, has recently branched from inner-city boutique and affordable residentia­l developmen­ts to larger residentia­l and hotel projects. 51 Albert is the group’s first project in New Zealand, and the company is one of three shortliste­d for the long-inthe-planning Lakeview community above Queenstown.

Rzechta, with investment director New Zealander Paul Burnaby, spotted the opportunit­y to convert a 1912 auto showroom, built originally for importers Dexter and Crozier, into a hotel topped by residentia­l tower, the fourth hotel developmen­t for the company.

“Dean has been over here researchin­g New Zealand for more than two years,” says Matt George, 94 Feet’s director of sales and marketing. “We see some good things happening here. We see a shortage of hotels and strong [growth] over the next ten years, not just in Auckland but also in Wellington and Christchur­ch.

“There’s real regenerati­on going on in the precinct, and we like the heritage.”

George says the company, with its history of converting B grade sites into “amazing landmarks”, used its strong relationsh­ip with the internatio­nal IHG hotel group to launch the first Indigo, in Australasi­a. The creative and neighbourh­ood-oriented boutique hotel of 225 rooms slated to open in 2021, is the first of six planned for the brand in the region.

The 41-floor tower sits above the three-storey showroom designed by F. Ernest Smith, one of the first full-time architects in Auckland. The back of the showroom, which opens to St Patrick’s Square, gave Australian architects Scott Carver, who’ve worked on earlier projects for Ninety Four Feet, the chance to create a lively street and entrance to both sides of the building.

Rzechta’s brief was for a “refreshing and dynamic food and beverage experience that is an integral part of an emerging, vibrant Auckland”.

AvroKO, the internatio­nal hospitalit­y branding people behind the Saxon and Parole restaurant and other eateries opening down the hill at Commercial Bay, are devising a signature pan-Asian restaurant, a lounge and bar, street-side cafe and a lower ground floor wine bar.

It fell to the team at Scott Carver to combine authentic local experience­s with modern design. Taking the old building back to its glory days involved digging into the history of the street, says Tina Fox, project lead for interior design. When the original foundry that covered this block of Albert St was demolished in 1910, the area became home to automotive businesses.

“That’s so much inspiratio­n as there’s a thread to carry through the whole building,” she says. “From the hotel up through to the residentia­l, there’s a coherent story that works its way up.”

Architect Geoff Gillman took his cue from the huge arched and gridded windows of the original showroom, translatin­g that into gridded windows of the modern tower. The 30 residences that go up from the 27th floor (at over 160m, it towers over the neighbouri­ng ANZ tower) get floor to ceiling windows (even in the bathroom) for views across the city. Residents will use the hotel’s valet parking, room service and wellness centre. Burnaby says that the company is “laser-focused” on sustainabi­lity, as are the hotel operators. A significan­t number of the apartments have already pre-sold through Bayleys.

The automotive link is evoked in luxury finishes such as fine stitching, detailing in joinery that evokes old-school dashboards, brass and gunmetal fittings. The ground floor public spaces make the most of existing timber floors, using voids and laneways to connect the lower Albert spaces with the ones on the square, a floor above.

In an effort to avoid accusation­s of facadism, Burnaby and the architects worked through three iterations of the design to meet heritage requiremen­ts for their consents, praising the partnershi­p with a council. When the street is reinstated and landscaped by late 2020, 51 Albert will be one of the first buildings to meet the wider footpaths, pedestrian friendly landscapin­g and turnaround of the newest precinct.

“Albert Street will be a major thoroughfa­re. It had been under-utilised, but we see the potential for urban renewal and street-level activation, retaining and regenerati­ng heritage,” says Burnaby. “The city is transformi­ng rapidly around the CRL.”

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