The country’s largest stadium is delighted with today’s resource consent decision granting the right to host up to six
concerts a year as permitted activities at the 118-year old venue.
The stadium received extensive support for its application to host concerts when submissions were open to the public in
March 2020. 94% of submissions to Auckland Council were in favour of the proposal and a subsequent hearing was held in
November in front of three independent commissioners.
Eden Park is extending thanks to the community including neighbours, local businesses, sporting organisations and the
entertainment industry for ensuring their voices were heard in the process.
“We’ve been inundated with messages of congratulations this afternoon from a range of society. Our community came
together to make this decision possible and we couldn’t have done it without each of these individuals. We are thrilled
to have an overwhelming level of support to deliver more experiences for New Zealanders, which further showcases the
ongoing positive relationship Eden Park has with its neighbours. I am extremely proud of our staff and supporters who
have worked tirelessly to achieve today’s historic result,” says Eden Park Chief Executive Officer Nick Sautner.
The decision to grant approval means that Eden Park does not have to apply for a separate resource consent for each
individual concert which proved to be both cost prohibitive and time consuming in 2018. It allows shows to be booked,
scheduled and confirmed years in advance.
The independent commissioners’ report released today states that granting consent to the application would promote the
sustainable management of natural and physical resources.
‘That is, it would allow the use of an existing physical resource (Eden Park) in a way that would enable people and
communities to provide for their social, economic, and cultural well-being while sustaining the potential for that
resource to meet the reasonably foreseeable needs of future generations, safeguard natural resources and avoid, remedy
or mitigate adverse effects on the environment.’
– Decision LUC60351212
“These events will provide employment opportunities and economic benefits for Auckland and the entire economy, as well
as much-needed entertainment experiences for Kiwis. We have artists ready to announce shows at Eden Park however we are
required to wait the appeal window is closed to share details,” says Nick Sautner.
The appeal window closes in 15 working days.About Eden Park
Eden Park is New Zealand’s national stadium and a globally iconic arena, located in central Auckland. With 118 years of
history, the Park has hosted some of the world’s most memorable sporting moments from cricket, to rugby, to rugby league
and football. A range of other community initiatives and events are also hosted throughout the year.
Eden Park Trust operates as a statutory not-for-profit body corporate, registered as a charitable trust with the
Charities Commission. Its objectives are to promote, operate and develop Eden Park as a high quality multi-purpose
stadium for the use and benefit of rugby and cricket as well as other sporting codes and other recreational, musical,
and cultural events for the benefit of the public of the Auckland region.
Its rich history and profile is unmatched by any other stadium in the country. From its beginnings as a cricket ground
in 1903, Eden Park became the primary venue for major summer and winter sport in Auckland when in 1913, the owner,
Auckland Cricket, leased winter use of the ground to Auckland Rugby.
A Deed of Trust establishing Auckland Cricket and Auckland Rugby as the beneficial owners of Eden Park was signed in
1926 and has since been enshrined in legislation. Most notably remembered for hosting the 1987 and 2011 Rugby World Cup
Finals, Eden Park remains the home of both Auckland Cricket and Auckland Rugby as it has been for more than a century.
Each year, more than half a million sports and entertainment fans from around the world visit Eden Park. The stadium
successfully hosts sell-out crowds of up to 50,000 on match days and hosts more than 1,000 non-match day functions per
year. A range of community initiatives are also hosted throughout the year including the likes of The Lifewise Big
Sleepout, Auckland City Mission Christmas Appeal, Walk for Awareness (SNAP Fitness – Mental Health), Japan Day, NZ Eid
Day, The World’s Biggest Bootcamp, Eden Rugby Holiday Clinic, Field of Dreams, The Block NZ: Firehouse, Learn 2 Ride
(Auckland Transport) and the Eden Park Dog Walking Club, as well as local school assemblies and duathlons.