Excuse me for not being up with the play, but are they proposing to abandon the CBD and move it somewhere else?Kevyn Miller wrote:to accomodate the massive shift of homes and businesses from the east and CBD to land on the greenbelts to the north and west and satellite towns.
Hmm... you might not agree with me, but I think that the urban layout of low-rise mixed use neighbourhoods having ground floor shops facing onto existing roads and upstairs apartments facing onto new lanes and squares or courtyards could be the best thing to ever come out of the disaster. And I predict that over 10-20 years the commercial activity will return. When there's been no earthquakes for a long time having things built on stronger ground won't be as much of a priority as other factors.Kevyn Miller wrote:Daniel, The draft central city plan proposes reducing the "CBD" to just a few blocks around Hereford and Colombo streets with the rest of the central city within the four avenues being low-rise mixed use neighbourhoods. The general idea is to reinvent the 18th century for the 21st century by having ground floor shops facing onto existing roads and upstairs apartments facing onto new lanes and squares or courtyards, emulating typical older euopean town/city centre layouts. This is partly a response to the fact that half the businesses that have relocated from the central city to Addington, Hornby, the airport estate or the former borough centres have indicated they prefer being where they are now, the other half want or need an actual CBD of related commercial businesses, ie thats the corporate lawyers, accountants etc. It seems to be mainly the smaller businesses that were in the cheaper older buildings that don't intend moving back to a rebuilt CBD.
The other businesses moving to the west are the manufacturers that had been located at Bromley and Woolston. They are taking their rebuild money to stronger ground by the airport.
Jonthekiwi wrote:Oh contre! CHCH wants a rail system of some sort.
geoff_184 wrote:Christchurch doesn't seem to be realistically planning for a rail system, so if they don't want one, then it's a moot point about whether the government would back it or not. All we ever hear from Christchurch is multi-billion dollar pie-in-the-sky light rail or tram-train proposals, costing more than all of the Auckland and Wellington rail expenditure put together.
Jonthekiwi wrote:Oh contre! CHCH wants a rail system of some sort. Do you think a National Party lead Govt would help fund it, or take the lead like it does with RONs in development, design and funding?
Jonthekiwi wrote:Oh contre! CHCH wants a rail system of some sort.
Quick question: this means that Christchurch has the same loading gauge as Auckland?geoff_184 wrote:as well as a lot of trains soon to be available from Auckland.
Daniel wrote:Quick question: this means that Christchurch has the same loading gauge as Auckland?geoff_184 wrote:as well as a lot of trains soon to be available from Auckland.
Or did you mean the SD/SA carriages?
pcuser42 wrote:The SAs are out of gauge as well, although they're too long rather than too tall.
geoff_184 wrote:The worst part is that the timing of such a realistic proposal would be perfect right now, as Christchurch has the rebuild opportunity, as well as a lot of trains soon to be available from Auckland.
pcuser42 wrote:Daniel wrote:Quick question: this means that Christchurch has the same loading gauge as Auckland?geoff_184 wrote:as well as a lot of trains soon to be available from Auckland.
Or did you mean the SD/SA carriages?
The SAs are out of gauge as well, although they're too long rather than too tall.
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