Tuesday 27 November 2018
Queen Street to welcome pedestrians as part of city centre transformation
Today Council voted unanimously to move towards pedestrianising Queen Street and trialling an open streets initiative in
the city centre and suburbs.
Mayor Phil Goff said further pedestrianisation of Queen Street would change Auckland’s main street from a traffic route
to a place people can enjoy, and open streets trials would close off limited areas of the city and suburbs from vehicles
to enable streets to be used for people and events.
Mayor Goff said, “We want Queen Street to be a great place to walk, gather, relax and enjoy. We want it to change from
an area with one of the worst levels of vehicle pollution to a place that is pleasant and healthy to be in.
“With a resident population of 57,000 people and more public, open space being developed in our city centre, we are
taking a bold step towards increasing pedestrian areas on Queen Street and turning it into a destination rather than a
through road.
“We have to do this. This is a great vision and an absolute necessity.
“The nature of our city centre is changing. There are over 118,000 people working in the central city and 70,000
students and teachers. Hotel blocks are soaring bringing increasing numbers of tourists. Light rail and the City Rail
Link will increase public transport capacity by 370% and bring thousands more pedestrians into the city centre.
“The idea has strong support from Heart of the City, the City Centre Residents Group and the Waitemata Local Board.
“The next stage is to communicate with and listen to all of the stakeholders including residents, businesses and hotels
to see how best to proceed.
“We’re transforming Auckland’s city centre. Reconnecting people to our waterfront, our city and each other with more
public, open space, places to sit, walk and talk,” said Phil Goff
Planning Committee chair Chris Darby said, “This is about creating a welcoming place for people who can easily access
all that Queen Street has to offer. Imagine a summer in the city, with our streets thriving with people – sitting,
talking and interacting, all while small business flourishes.
“We know that Queen Street air quality is massively affected by vehicle emissions. We have an opportunity here to make
sure that this space has some of the cleanest air in the world, by changing how the space is used. That is significant.
“Auckland is rapidly changing. We must accelerate the change in focus from our city centre, turning it from a
‘drive-through’ to a ‘go-to’ – and sooner, not later,” said Chris Darby.
ENDS