Resilient Sprawl: An Alternative Auckland Plan

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Authors

Bradbury, Matthew
Bogunovich, Dushko

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Grantor

Date

2013-03

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Type

Conference Contribution - Paper in Published Proceedings

Ngā Upoko Tukutuku (Māori subject headings)

Keyword

Auckland (N.Z.)
compact city
sprawl
linear city
water city
high-density
low density
spatial plan
decentralization
New Zealand

ANZSRC Field of Research Code (2020)

Citation

Bradbury, M., and Bogunovich , D. (2012). Resilient Sprawl: An Alternative Auckland Plan. Governing City Futures Conference(Ed.), University of Western Sydney, Sydney (IN PRESS) (16 pages)

Abstract

In 2011, Auckland consolidated its seven councils into a single governing entity – the Auckland Council. Effectively, four cities and three rural districts were meshed into one city-region, with million and a half inhabitants. For a year the new Auckland Council has worked on the Spatial Plan, a document to guide the development of a city expected to gain an extra million inhabitant in 30 years. The plan that has just been completed and adopted advocates a ‘compact city’ model, loosely based on New Urbanist thinking. The plan proposes a rough 70-30% split of development - 70 % within the existing cities boundaries, and 30 % outside. This paper outlines an alternative growth strategy for Auckland to the official ‘compact city’ vision. Our proposition recognizes that the link between density and sustainability is much weaker than commonly understood. It also anticipates that the topology and technology of urban infrastructure is bound to profoundly change over the next couple of decades. This will further entice the centrifugal rather than the centripetal forces in the shaping of metropolitan form. We argue that the next million inhabitants of Auckland should be allocated, roughly evenly, to four main zones of the city-region: urban, suburban, peri-urban and ex-urban. Our proposition also stems from the recognition that, in the face of climate change and expected resources shortages in the not too distant future, Auckland has neither time nor money to rapidly or radically transform its predominantly suburban urban form. Also related to security, we question the wisdom of encouraging high-density when this clearly carries significant risk for a city founded on a very precarious natural site (volcanoes; earthquakes; tsunamis).

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University of Western Sydney, Sydney

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University of Western Sydney, Sydney

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