Property & Build: Election 2023

Page 24

ELECTION 2023

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lanning for and providing urban green spaces of any description, public and private, should not be optional,” the Commissioner says in a new report. “The environmental services green spaces provide – such as temperature regulation, stormwater management, air filtration and habitat provision – don’t just benefit individuals. They benefit everyone around them. They are a form of infrastructure every bit as important as pipes and roads. “The ability of our trees and parks to filter stormwater flows and cool their immediate surroundings can mitigate some of the heat and excess water that impervious surfaces generate. These services will be in even higher demand as our cities become hotter and more subject to extreme rain events in a changing climate.” The Commissioner’s report, Are we building harder, hotter cities? The vital importance of urban green spaces, presents new data on how public and private green space in Auckland, Hamilton and Greater Wellington has evolved over the decades. “New Zealand cities are currently well-endowed with green space, though some suburbs are greener than others. But our data show that urban green space has been declining over time. Between 1980 and 2016, green space per person fell by at least 30% in Auckland, and at least 20% in Hamilton. Nearly all of this loss occurred on private residential land,” the Commissioner says. The report found two main factors have driven this trend. The first is infill development – the conver24 propertyandbuild.com

New Zealand cities losing their leaves As we densify our cities to accommodate population growth, we must not lose sight of the environmental benefits that urban green space provides, warns the Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment, Simon Upton sion of yards and sections into houses and driveways in existing urban areas. The second is a shift towards larger houses on smaller sections in new subdivisions. Many councils are struggling to improve the quality and availability of public green spaces to compensate for the loss of private yards and gardens. The trends documented in this report were already playing out before recent Government moves to promote further intensification. The Medium Density Residential Standards will place particular pressure on private residential green space in years to come. The Commissioner offers several proposals to ensure that the contribution green space can make to urban environments is fully accounted for in future urban design.

One solution lies in building upwards rather than via low-rise infill development. Building upwards uses urban land more efficiently and reduces pressure to develop green spaces elsewhere in the city. More attention could also be given to counteracting the loss of private yards and gardens by improving nearby public green space. In the short term, this could be done by adding patches of larger shrubs and trees in local parks, road reserves and other neglected corners of public land. The difficulty of retrofitting green space into existing neighbourhoods highlights the importance of adequately providing it from the outset in new subdivisions on the city fringe. Councils could take a more proactive approach to land acquisition for future parks and reserves to help achieve

this. Green spaces provide benefits over potentially very long time horizons. Looking forward, the ongoing shift towards more densely populated cities and the emerging impacts of climate change will very likely make urban parks, reserves, gardens, vegetation and street trees even more valuable. The difficulty of re-establishing green space once lost makes it all the more important that planning and providing for urban green spaces is mandatory for local authorities just like it is for traditional ‘hard’ infrastructure. This could help avoid development decisions that create less liveable environments that we will have to live with – and in – forever.


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Hard work gets results

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pages 62-63

Chemical safety relies on meaningful cooperation

1min
page 61

How to attract, retain and support good staff

8min
pages 56-60

The great unlearning

5min
pages 54-55

The perfect combination of quality assurance, high stock levels and expertise

1min
pages 52-53

No better investment than chemical safety training

2min
page 51

Ensuring adequate respiratory protection

1min
pages 48-50

NZ workplace fatality rate is double Australia’s

2min
pages 46-47

Industry leader in soft fall protection on construction sites

1min
page 45

Physical threats & abuse widespread in construction

1min
page 44

Was the Covid-19 wage subsidy successful?

4min
pages 42-43

Are you maximising the benefits of your AEP?

5min
pages 40-41

How BIM Will Impact Your Future Infrastructure Projects

2min
page 38

Construction partnership aims to accelerate growth sectorwide

1min
pages 36-37

A collaborative way forward for infrastructure & construction

4min
pages 34-36

How will new energy standards affect Australia’s building sector?

2min
pages 32-33

Proven efficiency

1min
page 31

Safer, faster, multipurpose telehandlers

1min
pages 30-31

What does the future look like for housing in New Zealand?

7min
pages 26-29

Shortsightedness and poor planning lead to property buyouts

3min
pages 25-26

New Zealand cities losing their leaves

1min
page 24

National’s new housing strategy mixed bag’

5min
pages 22-24

Foreign buyer housing policy grabs attention of offshore billionaires

5min
pages 20-22

Kiwi innovation leading the way in concrete slab insulation

2min
pages 19-20

Would a land value tax incentivise housing growth

3min
pages 18-19

Development activity falling as headwinds intensify

4min
pages 16-17

Rental stock reaching crisis levels

2min
page 15

House prices up for first time since downturn

11min
pages 10-14

Commercial property insights Q2 2023

3min
pages 8-9

SLAB 200 HIGH PERFORMANCE 200kPa RATED INSULATION FOR CONCRETE SLABS

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page 7

Reserve Bank taking ‘wait and see’ approach

1min
page 6

Is our electoral system undemocratic

1min
pages 4-5

Site Safe New Zealand launch VR training courses for New

2min
pages 2-4
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