First we shape the cities — then they shape us.”.

These words by renowned Danish architect and urban designer Jan Gehl are a simple but powerful reminder of our ability – and perhaps even duty – to shape any city, including our own home of Auckland, for the better.

Unfortunately, as we all experience and know each day, a lot of Tāmaki Makaurau is shaped in a way that forces people to default to cars for getting around, clogging up our roads with congestion and exhaust, and making travel more stressful; whether you’re driving, walking, biking or catching a bus.

So what’s the best way to shape our own city for maximum ease and enjoyment of everyone who lives or visits?

In 2023 Jan Gehl visited George Street in Sydney, shortly after its highly popular makeover, seeing his team’s recommendations to pedestrianise and green the street come to fruition. In an interview with the Sydney Morning Herald he drew attention this real live example of successful city-shaping saying:

A good city is like a good party – people stay longer than really necessary because they are enjoying themselves,” Gehl said. “If you see a city with many children and many old people using the city’s public spaces it’s a sign that it’s a good quality place for people.

Sydney’s George Street was recently turned into a pedestrian-friendly transit mall. Image via broadsheet.com.au

Looking at the places which are humming in Auckland, we can see this wisdom on full display. The City Centre waterfront is perhaps the best example, and people flock to Te Komititanga square every day, drawn there not only by the central train station, ferries, express buses, and bike paths, but also attracted by the new shops, seating and trees to sit under, and places to gather, pause, and enjoy the show.

We do this because it is somewhere we feel safe and comfortable to relax and have fun. Yet only a decade ago Te Komititanga was a road, filled with buses. Now, it is a place to go to, rather than go through. It’s emblematic of a general buzz – more people shopping and visiting businesses, boosting the economy while securing jobs and creating opportunities to connect. 

Te Komititanga

To take another example in the City Centre, Freyberg Place used to be a road filled with cars. Now, it is a public square, integrated with the Ellen Melville Centre to become a wide-open community hub for meeting and relaxing, with indoor and outdoor space for events and markets. This is all beautifully in line with the fantastic plans and strategies outlined in Auckland Council’s City Centre Masterplan.

Vibrant, mixed-use Freyburg Square. Source: Scott Caldwell

The lesson is that by shaping our cities for people, rather than vehicles passing through, we create places that are better for everyone.

So where’s next? Top of the list for transformation – it’s already under way – is the Karanga-a-Hape Precinct Integration project, which aims to revolutionise the streets around the new CRL station entrances into people-friendly places before opening. Up until a few months ago, Auckland Transport had a great design, and it was essentially good to go, supported by a lot of extensive consultation to work out the kinks with the community.

Unfortunately, progress is not always linear, nor consistently forward. The essence of “Project K”, as it is known, had the rug pulled out from under itself.

As I’ve covered before, senior management in Auckland Transport had used some vocal opposition to scupper the publicly supported plans. The problem is the loudest voices we hear, that often boom through the quiet back rooms in our organisations, don’t usually represent the broader dreams and desires of communities. There was strong support for a public plaza on Mercury Lane, wider footpaths on Cross Street, enhanced local access and getting rid of rat-running traffic, as shown in multiple consultations and workshops, and in the outcry since AT’s last-minute changes were suddenly revealed. 

All of this was at risk.

The good news is the uproar against this switcheroo seems to have persuaded AT to move back towards their original plans, and many thanks to all of you who spoke up. Although we are yet to see where things finally land, I’m optimistic about where things are going. One thing’s for sure is it will be in a far better place than if everyone just sighed and accepted the change. 

The key thing is, saving Project K from last-minute undermining only happened because people spoke up for what we had been promised. There’s a really important lesson there – when we are vocal with our dreams (and hold public organisations to their promises) we have the power to shape our city for the better.

It’s important to note this power to shape our city isn’t limited to the hustle and bustle of the City Centre, nor around these transformational projects like CRL. Auckland is famously a city of connected villages, and each offers a burgeoning opportunity to transform our local streets from rat-running paradises rumbling with vehicles driving past, to quiet cul-de-sacs alive with the sound of birdsong, rustling leaves, kids playing, and the chatter of neighbours.

Cities all over the world are doing this, a win-win of reducing emissions and creating neighbourhoods focused on the needs of people. In fact, Auckland already has streets like this in suburbs like Freemans Bay and they are often some of the most coveted places to live.

There’s nothing stopping us from doing the same everywhere, rerouting through-traffic onto main routes, freeing up local streets so neighbourhoods can thrive. Changes like these are extremely cheap, and quick to implement. Not only that, they also enable local journeys to be taken by a pleasant walk or bike ride, lessening the clog of congestion on our main roads from short car trips.

One of London’s 85 LTNs (from 2022). Image from TfL, via Streetsblog.

This is a positive vision for our city – one focused on people. We’ll all thrive if we shape our city’s streets so everyone can choose how they travel, and so there’s room to gather and connect. Shaping our places well – around our train stations, on our local streets, in our town centres – will make every corner of Auckland feel like a welcoming, celebratory daily get-together that entices us to stay.

But to shape Tāmaki Makaurau to match its name – adored by many, the envy of Aotearoa, a home that makes us feel proud – we have to speak up for it.

For the neighbourhood around the Mercury Lane entrance to the Karanga-a-hape CRL station the plans are there and, thanks to the original renders of the design, we can already picture the festive vibes we’ll be feeling when CRL starts running. Trust me, when AT sticks the landing, there’ll be a whole lot of pride to go around!

Then we can crack on with extending the party to the rest of Auckland. Perhaps sooner than we might think.

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28 comments

  1. I took a walk along Cross Street with a critical eye yesterday to remind myself of its potential. I was reminded that it truly is one of the least pedestrian-focused streets anywhere in central Auckland. On the southern side of the street I literally had to walk in the roadway to avoid parked cars, and there’s a stretch on that side where the “footpath” is merely a yellow dashed line. The north side is little better, with no attempt at activation of the solid drab facades until you reach the eastern end of the street.

    It’s a perfect opportunity to create a vibrant and bustling street with boutique-like shops and stalls. Or if the K Road grunge is more appropriate, a street market (God knows Auckland is market-deficient) – though I can see George Court owners loving that prospect. What is there now is truly shameful, and needs urgent attention to be dealt with before the station opens in (8? 10? 12? 14? 16? 18?) months’ time.

  2. Agree, other Cities would have already planned and utilised the back streets of K Road (not just Cross Street) to make more a K Precinct, even moving some of the grungier stores and bars back for (you’d think) cheaper rents as K Road starts to gentrify. Cross Street should be the perfect Laneway instead its a car ridden mess filled with bins. (I got tattooed on Cross Street a few years ago and it felt like the perfect place for a tattooist if it wasn’t for all the cars etc)

  3. The number of students at Auckland university, 30 000, has been static over the past several years whereas Australian universities have double our number per capita. Earnings from international students is very important to our economy and culture. The university recently opened their world class recreation center and also built several modern student accommodation places. Precinct Properties is building a tall student accommodation building at 270 Queen St with just 15 sq m rooms to cater for the less well off.
    It’s important that the city supports the university because many of these people want to work and live in Auckland. Auckland’s Tech companies are expanding rapidly and NZ Tech exports are now our 3rd biggest export.
    The people I know who live in city apartments are happy living there and enjoy the vibrancy including the shows, music, plays, parks, shopping, galleries, library, food, culture and possibly, like me, the busy, beautiful downtown Tepid swimming pool.

    1. It’s just a shame that the University has littered the CBD with so many carbuncles. Lucrative cash-cows foreign students may be, there is yet to be any evidence that they’ve added to Auckland’s (already dismal) aesthetic or cultural values.

      1. “there is yet to be any evidence that they’ve added”

        Who is “they” in this sentence: the students or the buildings?

  4. So great to hear than when enough people of the community get together and voice their opinion ie getting AT to move back toward their original plan of project K, they are heard. Making walkways instead of driveways is so beneficial to the people and businesses.

  5. I see in the NBR that the George Court building has major deferred maintenance problems. There is considerable debate amongst the Body Corporate about the scope, timing and cost of the works. I understand that there is work needed on the windows, roof and portions of the interior. I’ll bet that this will all require scaffolding, vehicle access, and will extend into upper Mercury Lane. What a double bummer if some vocal opponents end up blighting the newly finished work with drawn out building repairs.

  6. “The good news is the uproar against this switcheroo seems to have persuaded AT to move back towards their original plans”

    Wait, what? You can’t just drop that without more details

  7. When Jan was here on an earlier visit, he proposed a change to Hobson St. Unfortunately, this has obviously been ignored.

    1. Hobson St is waiting for Albert St to be opened. The NZICC block has as much upgrade as Sky City will allow for already there.
      Work is to happen on Fanshawe St, Custom St and Lower Hobson Street, needing traffic diversions for Downtown Car Park and that viaduct to be removed and replaced with the new layout there.
      Look out for news on thise.

  8. Yeah there are many opportunities like this.

    Vogel Lane — https://wrongsideofmycar.blogspot.com/2018/11/park-or-parking.html
    Nicholas Street — https://wrongsideofmycar.blogspot.com/2020/10/nicholas-street.html

    Further out, Birkenhead Square — https://wrongsideofmycar.blogspot.com/2021/01/imagining-something-else-for-birkenhead.html.

    There is an existing development in progress around Northcote town centre although I am not sure what they are going to do in the town centre itself.

  9. Yes yes and yes.
    Now tree planting on northern sides of streets and plazas. We need shelter and the cooling effects

  10. Great news about Project K getting back to it’s original design. I hope we aren’t seeing the beginning’s of Maungawhau station’s planned environs being destroyed by the Mayor and his mad plans for a bus interchange.

  11. Sadly, there are too many like you in power that are “drinking the cool aid”.

    Follow street scenes on FB – amazing images of vibrant Queen Street with 4 lanes of traffic, parking and people wandering around safely – when AKL was vibrant and safe

    Now AT has destroyed central Auckland – as for the City Centre waterfront you wax lyrical about – I was walking along there last week at 6.20 pm and watched rats scurry from one planting to the next as people dump rubbish in them

    1. Loads of cars doesn’t make a place vibrant, otherwise it would be hard to go past the inner NW motorway for vibrancy.

    2. Where there are humans, there are rats.
      Where there are cars, humans outside of cars aren’t welcome.
      Queen Street and the waterfront are better places now than ever before.

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