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  1. Our cities are a sad joke, go to Ozzy to see real 1st world cities. All our money has gone feathering scumlords nests. Jacinda said she would not introduce a CGT, OVER TO YOU CHIPPY!!!!!!

  2. I think in the local situation this is largely due to the general weak state of the economy, as generated by far-right economic policies.

    The downtown areas used to be fairly vibrant, busy places. But once real production and diversification went into reverse, so did investment (and wages) — so you began to see a sort of cultural wasteland developing in the cities.

    If the downtown areas had continued to develop properly, large multi-storey shopping malls and department stores would dominate the High Street. There would be a large number of cultural events in nearby public squares and stadiums, drawing big crowds.

    Rather than all the public transit being torn out, there would have been attempts to increase the tramways and trolleylines and divert traffic. People from inner suburbs wouldn’t be forced to travel outwards to go shopping, but could go inwards.

    The downtown area itself could be almost entirely high-rise commercial, so long as there is sufficient transportation and well-developed inner suburbs.

  3. It used to be residential project and commercial. Now it’s just residential and project. To monopolies playing big wallet little wallet.

  4. Wellington is atypical because it is ringed by mountains and sea, preventing the normal growth of the CBD and easy transport routes. Rather than invest in Transmission Gully we would have been far better off if we’d dispersed the various government functions around the country. Because with modern communications there is no need to be in the same office to function as a team. Far bigger, better, international organizations do it with ease today.
    Besides Wellington isn’t a real city – it’s a port village with a parliament. In real cities a critical mass is reached where they devolve into conurbations with people living, working and shopping in their suburb. The hub & spoke concept falls apart because of the difficulty and cost of moving millions of people around needlessly.
    In the case of Auckland, the council has turned our once vibrant CBD into a dead zone of orange road cones, empty cycle lanes and a violent underclass. I live a nominal 10 minutes from the CBD but haven’t been there for over a year.

  5. Town centers were not empty 20 years ago

    So why are they empty now? Because the political left has made it so hard to get there. They insist on closing down vehicle parking and forcing people to change transport modes. The people recognise that changing transport modes costs them time and reliability. How have people reacted? They have not changed transport mode but have changed where they congregate.

    The suburban malls are absolutely humming. They can’t believe their luck that our city hierarchy have restricted movement in the central city to such a large extent.

    As is always the case with the political left, they make decisions without fully understanding how people will react. Then when people react in ways they don’t like, the political left finds a way to blame another party, in this instance former “conservative” councils. The only blame in this instance can be found via a conventional mirror.

  6. In Wellington ever changing earthquake strengthening rules aren’t helping, plus fantasists who want to turn the town into another Amsterdam regardless of the realities and regardless of what most of the citizens actually want.

  7. Von Thunens concentric rings theory of urban development…learnt that 45 years ago. It seemed cogent at the time but took no regard to the impact of automobiles enabling strip malls and vast suburban development, nor of the end of industry as it got offshored. I really think town planners are the people looking for the horse after it has bolted.

    1. Keep informing Nick J – von Thunen is new to most of us. A wormhole into the morass of ideology that we can edge into to add to our nous. And as for the horse, that’s 20th century thinking having let it bolt. Now we are so unstable, heh, I think we should look to co-owning a horse and finding ways to set up horse-only areas of the city, cycle and horse only roads, plus rickshaws. We have to start thinking laterally and even inverted, reversed; going backwards to go forwards is too revolutionary for the narrow specialists of today.

  8. The city is full of Ideology of the administrators who are following each others ideas that have been born in some university. They are made to look good and hoping that some famous travel writer and painter will paint them so that tourists will come and spend money and sit at outdoor cafes. Ordinary people don’t have time to do this. Retired people are too busy planning trips elsewhere to patronise their own roundtable arena.

    When I was working in the local fish factory and had half an hour for lunch I think, short time anyway, I needed to get into town, parked on a yellow line and was prevented from doing some small financial transaction being served by classist people who didn’t like my plain clothes, or my fish smell, or my work-induced urgency. And it isn’t necesssarily easier or better doing financial or other things by machine.

    As a very ordinary citizen I don’t occur in the thoughts of the green inspired admin lords. Bikes Rules Okay but that is a cult now, where they blast out tracks through native bush for the bloody mountain biking and probably add to slips in our downpours becoming too frequent. Or they point their pointy-bottomed lycra backsides at drivers while they ride side by side on roads built and paid for by the motorist.

    Good rant eh The most honest thoughtful piece written today?

  9. Christchurch is definitely hollow on the middle. Initially due to the earthquakes, but long term to the right royal fuck up by National, Creepy’s bloated ego, and the staggering incompetence by his favorite arse kisser, Brownlee.

    1. Bruce, the centre of Chch was getting hollowed out in the 70s. The local company head offices were bought up by Auckland or Aussie interests, so commerce moved away. Malls began to be built so shopping moved as well. The earthquake just made it obvious.

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