The Auckland plan ignores the potential for modern technology to solve our transport and
other problems and, instead, pushes expensive and inappropriate 19th and 20th
century solutions. They plan to
spend about $3 billion on a rail tunnel that, like all tunneling projects will
cost much more and will demand huge subsidies for every passenger. The tunnel
is needed only because the plan decrees that people and employment must be
crowded into the city centre.
The planners seem
to be totally ignorant of recent advances in personal transport and
telecommuting that, even now, make their plans obsolete. Their plan will make
Auckland one of the most expensive cities in the world because they are
deliberately restricting the availability of land and jacking up the price of
housing to achieve their dream of high density living and their obsession with
rail transport.
Their plans for
transport are based on the assumption that personal transport technology will
not change substantially over the next 30 years. They seem to hate motorcars
and ignore their steadily increasing fuel efficiency. They give little
consideration to the enormous benefits that personal transport has brought to
everyone and do not seem to be aware that most car journeys are not to and from
a single place of work. Most car journeys are for transporting children – and
all the gear that now goes with them – for going to meetings, for shopping and
for many other purposes.
A revolution in
personal transport is imminent and inevitable and and will bring large fuel
savings. You can now buy cars that can park themselves and, in a traffic jam,
will follow the car ahead. All the major manufacturers are developing
automatically guided (driverless) cars. They will reduce accidents by 50 to
80%, double or treble the capacity of motorways and allow us to call up a
driverless car or minibus by text message to take us – and anyone else
traveling in the same direction – to where we want to go. Soon people will be
able to enjoy most of the advantages of personal transport without even owning
a car. Driverless cars already have a proven safety record: cars developed by
Google have already covered 300,000 miles all over California without a single
accident. Convoys of trucks with a single driver have already driven on the
motorways in Europe. The potential is enormous and everyone will benefit.
Improvements in
modern communications allows more and more people to do some or all of their
work from home. In many cases, these people will be traveling from meeting to
meeting rather than to their normal place of work. For them, last century’s
public transport simply will not work.
The Auckland plan
will impose huge increases in population density in the central isthmus area
where sooner or later, there will be another volcanic eruption. One of the
lessons that came out of the Christchurch earthquake was "do not put all
your assets in one place" – especially in areas prone to natural
disasters.
Probably the
worst aspect of the Auckland plan is their deliberate policy of restricting the
availability of land. Everyone complains about the high cost of housing but, in
fact, it is land and consent costs, not the houses themselves, that are
expensive. For example, Houston, Texas is one of the most
affordable major cities in America, with housing costing only 3 times the
annual average income – the Auckland ratio is 6.7. Houston has no
zoning and moderate restrictions on how property owners use their land. It has
an innovative and growth-friendly environment that creates tens of thousands of
new jobs each year. Cities dominated by town planners have the least affordable
housing, the fastest growing traffic congestion, ever-increasing rates and
declining services. Is that what we want?
Plenty of land is
available for expanding Auckland and developing new centres where people can
shop and work. Much of the area from Silverdale to Huapai and in the Clevedon
area is in lifestyle blocks that have little agricultural value. Increased
density would bring large benefits and there are many other areas of low
agricultural value suitable for suburban development. Releasing more land and
streamlining the consent process would result in a dramatic fall in the cost of
new housing. If this is done we won’t need an underground railway and the
billions saved would easily pay for the infrastructure needed. It is also
scandalous that, having made land hugely expensive, the Council now demands
government subsidies to solve the problem.
The policy of
increased population density represents social engineering on a large scale.
Experience overseas with high-rise apartment buildings tells us that it leads
to many social problems. Our environmentally friendly suburban backyards with
trees and gardens are a haven for birds and bees, provide easily supervised
areas for children to play, for entertaining and workshops for our boys and
girls to learn practical skills. These advantages should not be lightly cast
aside. They are a key factor in the Kiwi “can do” attitude.
The Auckland Plan
is hugely expensive, will force up the price of housing even further, and turn
Auckland into a city with suburbs that only the rich can afford to live in.
Poor people will be forced to live in high rise tenements deprived of personal
transport. We should reject it.
Bryan Leyland is
a Consulting Engineer with wide interests in modern technology.
3 comments:
Excellent article Brian! The sooner these sun rises in the west, growth containment ideologues are buried, the better.
Well said Brian Leyland! We are in the process of subdividing a piece of land in what used to be the Rodney District and it was a really expensive proposition. The conditions demanded by Council and the Marxist meddlers that inhabit the corridors of Local Government, make it virtually impossible. We have spent around $80,000, to create one new title and we still have about $70,000 to go. So this tells you that Private Property Rights have been usurped to such a degree that they are almost non existent. Can someone, namely Maurice Williamson or the other dude who is considering standing against Loopy Len, please study the Texas model and get cracking with dealing to the hugely restrictive and crippling land issues that create massive and meaningless cost for would be home owners.
Your points about telecomuting and personal transport are so right and Loopy Lens 19th century transport solutions are so wrong. Rail for Auckland is ridiculous. It will be totally uneconomic and out of date before the first sod is turned and with a total population in the entire country of only 4 million, rail will never work in NZ cities.
We do not want or need high density living. Let the people have land where they can grow vegetables and entertain and educate their children. This lifestyle is what makes New Zealand such a great place to live and raise children. Why would anyone trade our kiwi lifestyle for the filthy tenement tips of European cities that breed criminals and discontent. Why import the social issues that infest the cities where high density tenement housing has been created? It will not be upwardly mobile, educated, urban liberals who live in high density affordable housing. It will be the lower socio-economic sector. Let Len Brown and Australian communist Russell Norman live in those high density tenement tips.
At last someone realises that the final cost will be far higher than the current estimate. Consider how the costs estimates for a new port / terminal in the South Is for the Cook Strait feries has gone up. And what happened at Eden Park?
If only we could compare the original forecast cost of the current rail expansion with the amount spent to date. My guess is that that has more than doubled.
Post a Comment