Notable
Trees
The WDC is
currently going through what it calls a pre-consultation stage of a plan
change regarding the management of protected trees in the district. They say, "Pre-consultation
represents a great opportunity for you or your organisation to make a
meaningful contribution in formulating provisions that work for everyone
involved”.
By way of
preamble, the policy states, "Trees provide a significant contribution
to the amenity, historical, ecological and cultural values of the District.
This is particularly so in urban areas where the ongoing demand for land
development can threaten the existence of established trees…Individual trees
and groups of trees that are considered to be among the most significant trees…are
scheduled in this chapter in order to protect the benefits they provide for
current and future generations."
“Notable
Trees” are given a score, based on what's referred to as the Standard Tree
Evaluation Method (STEM). A tree that scores 100 is considerable notable and
worth protecting. The scoring system takes no account of the negative factors
of having a large tree on private property.
There are
321 trees on the register - most of those are on private land. In addition to
these Notable Trees, "Public Trees" are also protected. This (with
some exemptions) means, "any tree or trees located within a road
reserve, park or reserve administered by Whangarei District Council greater
than 6.0m in height or with a girth (measured 1.4m above the ground) greater
than 600mm."
The issue
that will be debated during the plan change is likely to focus on the trees on
private land, and the requirements placed upon a private landowner. As things
stand at present, while the tree is protected for the benefit of the public,
the costs fall totally on the private landowner. Those costs are in the form of
tree management (which in most cases must be done by an arborist), and land use
restrictions - for example, restrictions on the "Construction or
alteration of any structure, excavation of land, compaction of soil or
formation of any new impervious surfaces within the dripline of a Notable
Tree".
There is a
good argument that if notable trees are to be protected for the benefit of the
public, then the costs and management responsibilities should fall upon the
WDC.
Comments
must be made in writing and received no later than 10 November 2017. For
details see wdc.govt.nz and search "Plan Change 129".
A Careful Deconstruction
It has taken
the organisers of the Hundertwasser project some time to come to the reality
that the former NRC building cannot be "reinvigorated through the
application of significant interventions", which some say was
Hundertwasser's vision. It seems the significant intervention has now become a
demolition, or in the language of Mayor Mai, "a careful
deconstruction".
Another
reality is that this is far from an ordinary building project, on a site with
its own challenges. The town basin, and much of the CBD, is reclaimed land,
which has major implications on the foundation work required. The problem is
exacerbated in the case of the Hundertwasser building because of its size and
weight, due to its earth roof.
Registrations
of Interest are currently being sought for the construction of the project. The
promoters believe the work can be carried out within the current cost
estimates, but the reality test will come when the contract prices are in.
Frank Newman
writes a weekly article for Property Plus.
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