Our Mission: To represent the Onehunga community concerning Onehunga Bay, SH20, public transportation, utilities, and the enhancement of the greater Onehunga environment.

Important Meeting 27 July 2010

Update on Onehunga Foreshore Restoration Developments

 

It has been 11 months since contractors were invited by ACC to prepare designs and cost outcomes for the proposed 11 hectare Onehunga Foreshore Restoration project.

The timetable set for the project back in August 2009 has not been achieved and potentially places the project at risk as it enters the transition from Auckland City Council to the new Auckland Super City.

Jim Jackson, Chairman of the Onehunga Enhancement Society ("TOES") says "It is critical that this restoration project which has been fought for over a long period of time by our community continues into the new super city structure in a transparent and rational manner. I have very real concern that the project could fall "off the radar" and our community needs to ensure that doesn't happen".

It is essential that all TOES members and the wider community attend this meeting.

Politicians from both central and local government will be attending along with key community representatives to this public meeting which is being held at the Onehunga RSA on the corner of The Mall & Princess St.

The public meeting will be an opportunity to update the community on the current position and the way forward.

  • Time:     7pm-8pm
  • When:  Tuesday, 27th July
  • Venue: Onehunga RSA, 67 Princes Street

 

We look forward to seeing those who are able to make it to the meeting.

Please forward this email to anyone else you think will be interested in attending.

 

 

TOES Public Meeting

27 Jul 2010 - 19:00
27 Jul 2010 - 21:00

TOES Public Meeting is set down for Tuesday 27th July Onehunga RSA 7-00pm start

Construction Update

Update on Manukau Harbour Crossing is attached.

If you are unable to open the link please email webmaster@toesociety.org.nz and we will forward a PDF version.

 

 

$28m to rejuvenate Onehunga Bay

Article in N Z Herald 29 December 2009 by Mathew Dearnaley

 

"Landscape designers have raised hope among Onehunga community leaders that beaches broken up by an undulating headland can be restored to the suburb's dilapidated waterfront within a $28 million budget.

The Onehunga Enhancement Society says all of seven concept designs submitted for an ambitious restoration project provide for 11ha of reclamation promised by the Government in the 1970s to mitigate the impact of motorway construction on the waterfront.

Auckland City staff initially estimated such a large reclamation including several beaches would cost at least $40 million, blowing a budget provided by their council and the national Transport Agency, which is duplicating Mangere Bridge and widening its motorway approaches for $230 million.

The city council, which agreed to add $10 million to a pledge of $18 million from the Transport Agency, now says it hopes to award a contract by September for a full restoration project to take until mid-2014.

That follows a decision to short-list three of the seven design and construction groups which submitted concept proposals, and to prepare a detailed design brief for them.

The brief is to be developed by a working group of representatives of the enhancement society and the Maungakiekie Community Board as well as city council and Transport Agency officials.

Enhancement society chairman Jim Jackson said the latest progress was most encouraging, after years of campaigning to persuade the agency and its predecessors to honour the Government's original commitment to rehabilitate Onehunga Bay.

Although he was not at liberty to disclose details of the submitted proposals, his group felt they all displayed "a quality outcome for this much-neglected part of Auckland".

"Two designs in particular absolutely stood out, including beaches and an undulating headland - not just some flat piece of land," he said.

Mr Jackson said that although he understood Auckland Regional Council was generally opposed in principle to reclamations, the winning contractor could be confident of community support at resource hearings for restoring and beautifying an area which had been "absolutely trashed" in the past.

Although the regional council resisted efforts to persuade it to contribute financially to the project, it was represented on a panel which evaluated the seven initial design concepts.

City communications manager Glyn Jones said restoring Onehunga's waterfront was a significant project for his council. Its allocation of $10 million represented a commitment "to delivering enhanced access to a high-quality coastal environment along the foreshore".

Although the council hoped to have the contract awarded by September, that would be subject to endorsement by the Auckland Transition Agency in the lead-up to the creation of the Super City in November.

Once a contract was awarded, the project would enter its developed design, planning and resource consenting phase, which would include public and iwi consultation.

Transport Agency northern highways manager Tommy Parker said it was too soon to tell whether the full 11ha could be reclaimed within the budget, and a final scheme would have to be signed off by his board.

But Mr Parker also disclosed that he had asked the Fletcher Construction-led consortium widening the motorway to suggest a price for replacing the old Mangere Bridge for the use of pedestrians and cyclists and for fishing."

Syndicate content