Whanganui Chronicle

Velodrome dominates plan hearings

- Robin Martin of RNZ

The trend throughout the world is to build multi-purpose facilities.

Bob Smith, Regional Velodrome Developmen­t Trust

Aproposal to roof the Whanganui Velodrome has dominated the city’s Long Term Plan hearings this week. The council wants to put a basic roof over the track for $20 million but many submitters want it to go further and budget for a multi-use facility, while a significan­t number say the velodrome has had its day and should be demolished.

The Whanganui Velodrome, with its Malaysian hardwood track, was considered one of the fastest in the world when it was built in 1995 and several New Zealand records have been set there.

But the track was never roofed — as planned — and was closed indefinite­ly in February because the track is rotting.

The council is consulting on three options for the velodrome: decommissi­on it for $200,000; its preference the $20 million roof (labelled the tin-shed option by some critics); and a $36 million stateof-the-art multi-use centre.

At the hearing many submitters pushed for a new 2.2 or 2b option — a scaled-back $26 million multi-use facility.

Former Whanganui resident John Mcdonnell, who was heavily involved setting up the Avantidrom­e in Cambridge, said multi-use was the way to go.

“Put a roof over the velodrome. Construct it and they will come.

“The Whanganui community have shown their support for a covered velodrome facility that would be multipurpo­se

and, from my eight years of experience at Cambridge, I can see why Whanganui would want to be part of such an exciting venture.”

Mcdonnell said 80 per cent of Avantidrom­e use was community driven.

Les Kiriona, who owns the Whanganui bar and club Frank, saw potential for putting on gigs at a multi-use facility.

“We have had other groups that have wanted to come to Whanganui but we can’t find the right sized venue.

“For us, where we have Frank now, it has a 199 capacity or 475 with extra toilets

and stuff like that. So anyone wanting to come here with a medium-sized promoter, if you can find a venue that has a capacity 500 to 1000 they won’t come here. They skip us and go straight through to New Plymouth.”

But about 40 per cent of Whanganui residents want the city to cut its losses.

Paul Lowe is one of those. “I don’t believe a city of this size can afford a luxury like an extravagan­tly roofed velodrome. Lets get rid of what we’ve got and face up to the fact that that is what we can afford.”

Another local resident, Michael Law, also reckoned the numbers did not add up. “We have 44,000 people in Whanganui and that’s not a great investment. If you look on a return on investment of three to one and we look at risk allocation, we would need $3m worth of social benefit to Whanganui to validate a $1m loss in operating expenses.”

Cycling Whanganui president Ian Murphy believed the operating costs argument did not stack up. “The elephant in the room here potentiall­y is, what do other facilities in this town cost council, and that is pretty quiet in this conversati­on.

“We’ve got a pretty impressive facility being built across the other side of Victoria Avenue from where the velodrome is. I have a suspicion that’s going to cost us a bit each year.”

It was a point councillor Philippa Baker-hogan was happy to reinforce by adding that estimated running costs for the upgraded Sargeant Gallery would be $2m annually.

Bob Smith of the Regional Velodrome Developmen­t Trust warned the council’s preferred option would end up the preserve of cyclists only.

“The trend throughout the world today is to build multi-purpose facilities. Existing single-use facilities are being repurposed. In England, football stadiums, traditiona­lly the Mecca for soccer fans, are now being re-purposed to become multi-use.”

The Trust was behind the 11th-hour concept for the scaled-back $26m multipurpo­se stadium.

Former Hastings councillor Terry Coxon got underneath mayor Hamish Mcdouall’s skin when he suggested the council was deliberate­ly sidelining the Velodrome Trust.

“My appeal to you is to listen to Bob Smith and his team. Cover the velodrome with a proven membrane roof, but do it now. Stop procrastin­ating. There endeth the lesson.”

The council will decide on May 25 which option it will fund.

 ?? PHOTO / SUPPLIED ?? Whanganui Velodrome has been closed because of a rotting track surface
PHOTO / SUPPLIED Whanganui Velodrome has been closed because of a rotting track surface

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