Depends on which boundary I think, but I believe still small on the whole. But bigger than is currently and more symmetrical.
If my numbers are sound, it would be the biggest cricket oval (by capacity) in the world that is not in India or doesn’t host an AFL franchise - by about 25,000.
Eden Park so desperately wants to keep cricket, I reckon they should let the Quay Park stadium go ahead and then Eden Park can do away with trying to be a multi-purpose ground. They could then demolish the stands and build back smaller cheaper ones (maybe even a hill) and that would surely give them at least 70 metres on each boundary.
Then they would easily get cricket tests there.
Win win for everyone - except the Eden Park board's pockets of course
The projected EP revamp cost is up there, so I suspect grandstands will be retractable. Out for the cricket & in for rectangular sports. Then with the roof you might get some smart acoustics that traps the noise in for concert goers and keeps the decibels down outside, for Helen Clark and friends. So no usage restrictions
But nah, I'm for bowling it over, putting in some much needed housing in that area - maybe keeping a 25,000 cricket ground in the middle (alot of the English cricket grounds have housing bordering right up to the stadiums) - and building something perfect, for the football codes down at Quay Park.
Is the usage issues the noise of the events or the associated road closures and noise of fans after the game etc? I thought it was always more the latter. Some seats moving slightly forward are going to be extremely underwhelming.
Some piss in your garden, climb up on the fence, throw bottles etc.
Others are just quite loud in what is an otherwise fairly quiet area. There’s a lot of road restrictions in place and near gridlock pre- and post game. It can mean not being able to get access to your property easily at certain times of the day. Worrying if someone will walk behind or in front of your car as you go out the driveway. It makes it harder and harder to have a normal life.
And the residents that I know are already fairly gracious about having to put up with that once or twice or (three times with a concert and a couple of games?) a week for a better part of a year. And apparently about 80% were fine with a few more concerts. EDIT: apparently 32 events a year. I’m not sure if that’s 32 in the evenings or 26 games and 6 concerts plus other daytime events…
As well you never know when you might have a sharke day or week at work or in your relationships and you just wanna go home, without several thousand people walking past your front gate.
Especially considering the character of people who represent Eden Park, claiming that Taylor Swift was coming when they clearly couldn’t provide the arena size required. They’re a bunch of sharke stirrers just grabbing all the money they can, while everyone else is being told to cut back. They no longer bother hiding their bad faith in asking for the parliament to override everything just for them…
And dealing with the lovely people who think the treaty is infringing their rights to have daily and nightly concerts and events in the middle of suburban Auckland, when they had no interest in helping the local music industry in central Auckland as retirees bought apartments and then complained and shut down long running venue or a bunch of other hypocrisies…
But yeh, Eden Park is plenty busy. It’s just a terrible location for the stadium that it obviously aspires to be.
If it was a downtown stadium they’d be able do construction at night most likely?
Lol- what a prick that Sautner sounds. Wants to clean out every park and grab every source of funding.
These are events in parks all over the many many charming places in the city- Coyle Park, Pt England, Victoria Park, the Domain, Mt Eden reserve, Western Park, Grey Lynn Park, Aotea Square, Albert Park, Cornwall Park, the Showgrounds, and Wynyard quarter to name just a few off the top of my head. Eden Park wants to grab those as well!
From your article above:
‘We currently host the Eid Festival and would welcome more religious and community festivals - imagine Carols in the Park, noodle markets, the Auckland Lantern Festival, the Auckland Pride Festival and even Movies in the Park. ‘
Imagine more community festivals in a place that doesn’t want to listen to its community.
Being fair to the guy it’s a hospital pass of a job.
The disconnect between the massive grand vision and the idea that it’d be kept financially viable by pinching small community events that are currently fairly happy in comparatively undeveloped small local parks all over the isthmus is kinda staggering.
It’d also mean almost all local cricket would struggle to be there given it bulldozes the historic and charming number 2 ground and non-super rugby there would also likely be a no go. Even Super rugby there would feel fairly empty. But that’d be a problem with a waterfront stadium too.
But that’s why we’ve kept leaving the decisions on the stadiums, because much like around the world they’re great for the big set pieces like world cups and then never really used anywhere close to capacity. There’s no obvious answer and all answers we have come up with have significant drawbacks.
Both the EP 2.0 and Quay Park stadium proposals have ‘club mode’. That 15-30K crowd range that will be enough for the Blues, Warriors & Auckland FC. Again that setup (top tier closed off, retractable lower tiers etc), seems to work okay at other big stadia like, Vancouver's BC Place
I was skeptical about the feasibility of building a stadium above the busiest rail junction in the city, but I've flip-flopped. I am now pulling hard for Te Tōangaroa to win just to shut Sautner's mouth.
Surely even that wouldn’t help NPC or cricket with sub-5k crowds.
Super Rugby it’d probably suit. Likely to be too small for the derby what with the flood of political philosophers and sailors to support AFC…
Never post on the Auckland stadium debate when you’re hungry. It’s a new maxim to live by.
I think with both proposals they want the Warriors as tenants, but Mt Smart stays. The idea being Penrose is then used for alot of smaller crowd community type sport, which I guess would include the Auckland NPC Rugby team.
Auckland Cricket would have to make Colin Maiden, Cornwall Park or somewhere it's permanent home. And of course if Quay Park is chosen (which I'd favour), then what does happen with international cricket in Auckland, presuming the Eden Park precinct is turned into housing. Or maybe there is room to keep a cricket oval in that precinct, surrounded by housing as you find with alot of the UK cricket grounds.
Surely even that wouldn’t help NPC or cricket with sub-5k crowds.
Super Rugby it’d probably suit. Likely to be too small for the derby what with the flood of political philosophers and sailors to support AFC…
Never post on the Auckland stadium debate when you’re hungry. It’s a new maxim to live by.
I think with both proposals they want the Warriors as tenants, but Mt Smart stays. The idea being Penrose is then used for alot of smaller crowd community type sport, which I guess would include the Auckland NPC Rugby team.
Auckland Cricket would have to make Colin Maiden, Cornwall Park or somewhere it's permanent home. And of course if Quay Park is chosen (which I'd favour), then what does happen with international cricket in Auckland, presuming the Eden Park precinct is turned into housing. Or maybe there is room to keep a cricket oval in that precinct, surrounded by housing as you find with alot of the UK cricket grounds.
Cornwall Park would be a ridiculous nightmare traffic-wise (it's right opposite the Showgrounds/Logan Campbell Centre, we all know what traffic's like there when there's an event on). At least Colin Maiden is near a major train station.
Still holding out for that Victoria Park redevelopment if we can't get Western Springs.
I was skeptical about the feasibility of building a stadium above the busiest rail junction in the city, but I've flip-flopped. I am now pulling hard for Te Tōangaroa to win just to shut Sautner's mouth.
Cut and covering the rail tracks + realigning Quay St will be expensive business, but worth noting that this has always been part of the 'masterplan' for the area - stadium or no stadium. So an issue that will have to be faced at some point or another.
Both the EP 2.0 and Quay Park stadium proposals have ‘club mode’. That 15-30K crowd range that will be enough for the Blues, Warriors & Auckland FC. Again that setup (top tier closed off, retractable lower tiers etc), seems to work okay at other big stadia like, Vancouver's BC Place
For the most part I am calling bullshark on every stadium proposal's 'club mode'. From what we've seen nothing resembles Vancouver. But at least a rectangle stadium with steep sides will feel cosier and less empty than an oval with temporary seating.
"The need to build a podium over the top of the existing rail lines is likely to not only add quite a bit of cost to the project, but would also be quite disruptive to rail services during construction. One way to minimise that would be realign and trench that section of the Eastern Line. It does seem they want to take some land from the port to shift Quay St north, which would likely provide the needed space.
"This would also provide a golden opportunity to grade-separate the Quay Park junction. This would have large benefits for the entire rail network by helping to improve reliability. This flat junction already imposes a significant constraint on all rail services in Auckland, as trains travelling in opposite directions entering and exiting Britomart need to cross paths – and when that happens, even small delays on a single service can quickly cascade across the network. That will only get worse as service frequencies increase post CRL. The need to grade-separate this junction has been identified as a likely future requirement in Auckland Transport and Kiwirail’s 30-year rail business case – so hopefully the designers of this stadium have included it in their plans."