Eden Park
-
@Kiwiwomble
Well it felt like 5km with the side streets we were walking through. Went through the Eden rugby club way. It wasn’t a 10min walk. It was more like a 20min walk. All the charter buses were parked there.Catching the train was much easier. 2min walk.
-
@ARHS - most of downtown Auckland is reclaimed from the sea. Not sure what the problem is. According to you Britomart station (ie: that underground station right next to the harbour) should’ve been flooded by now. Well, it hasn’t flooded. Not even with the recent floods.
-
@JK - fair enough. When I lived in the Shore years ago, the buses were terrible. I’m told they still are recently with all the public transport disruptions this year.
Yes I think they still are. I don't catch them for daily commutes but the ferries are very unreliable.
For a game though its quite different with buses direct to Eden Park from most bus stations as well as other handy locations like Takapuna central. Its very easy and no charge as all included within your ticket (not that they even check).
-
@ARHS - most of downtown Auckland is reclaimed from the sea. Not sure what the problem is. According to you Britomart station (ie: that underground station right next to the harbour) should’ve been flooded by now. Well, it hasn’t flooded. Not even with the recent floods.
Read what I wrote. You promoted the steps down to the harbour water. Maybe I read it wrong in thinking it was being built immediately adjacent to the water. But I understood it was to be a floating roof for the promoted design.
Because of the roof thing i asked about the plan for watering the turf at that level and whether the roof would block all rain.
There will be lots of water pumped out for people and services.
If you published the engineering plan that might help the cause. -
I shouldn't get involved in a thread where people have such strong opinions but I would like to note just recently Auckland City Council had an over 200 million $ bill for leaky buildings, it is a problematic and expensive thing to fix a portside stadium if things go wrong and even modern architecture gets it wrong, spectacularly.
And the most famous harbourside architectural landmark of the 20th century went massively over budget and they sacked the architect.
If it was my money I'd be very sceptical of a stadium set into the water, especially in terms of costs, construction quality, and getting it built on time. Surely there is an easier way and a location that is more accessible than an overcrowded pimple on the edge of an isthmus.
-
@nostrildamus said in Eden Park:
I shouldn't get involved in a thread where people have such strong opinions but I would like to note just recently Auckland City Council had an over 200 million $ bill for leaky buildings, it is a problematic and expensive thing to fix a portside stadium if things go wrong and even modern architecture gets it wrong, spectacularly.
And the most famous harbourside architectural landmark of the 20th century went massively over budget and they sacked the architect.
If it was my money I'd be very sceptical of a stadium set into the water, especially in terms of costs, construction quality, and getting it built on time. Surely there is an easier way and a location that is more accessible than an overcrowded pimple on the edge of an isthmus.
Yeah it's called Eden Park, just keep iterating on improving access. As a bonus, you don't throw away a century of history.
-
Yeah it's called Eden Park, just keep iterating on improving access. As a bonus, you don't throw away a century of history.
yeah I think my family have been supporters there for getting up to close to a century and you forgot arguably the biggest advantage: the AB Eden Park record!
https://www.allblacks.com/news/eden-park-winning-streak-on-the-line-2/But in my opinion, there has to be a line beyond which it wouldn't be feasible to upgrade Eden Park-I don't know what that line is and if it would be reached but I think there should be one.
Oh and I've walked top of Queen St (where I used to live) to Eden Park and it was a great little walk.
To the poster who said North Shore was too far with public transport, that has definitely improved in the last few years but yeah it still depends on exactly where one lives on the Shore.
-
@nostrildamus - well I’m a supporter of the Quay park site. Surely though, the “sunken stadium” isn’t actually sitting in water? It’s going to be reclaimed land like everywhere else in downtown Auckland. Engineers have repeatedly said it on here that it’s not a problem.
-
@nostrildamus - well I’m a supporter of the Quay park site. Surely though, the “sunken stadium” isn’t actually sitting in water? It’s going to be reclaimed land like everywhere else in downtown Auckland. Engineers have repeatedly said it on here that it’s not a problem.
Everything’s solvable with enough money.
-
@nostrildamus - well I’m a supporter of the Quay park site. Surely though, the “sunken stadium” isn’t actually sitting in water? It’s going to be reclaimed land like everywhere else in downtown Auckland. Engineers have repeatedly said it on here that it’s not a problem.
Yeah um it takes money to keep reclaimed land as land. Especially with the projections for sea rise.
He's an architect not an engineer but:
and if you can zoom in via this:
as to the costs (and some section details) consider (and extrapolate from) this:
-
@nostrildamus - well I’m a supporter of the Quay park site. Surely though, the “sunken stadium” isn’t actually sitting in water? It’s going to be reclaimed land like everywhere else in downtown Auckland. Engineers have repeatedly said it on here that it’s not a problem.
Everything’s solvable with enough money.
As an old colleague of mine used to say "There's no such thing as an engineering problem, it's a money problem."