Not much is certain in Christchurch these days. But one
certainty is that in the coming years, the city will be
radically different from what it was 18 months ago.
With so much of the central city wrecked by the recent
earthquakes, the old English heritage is rapidly disappearing
and leaving a blank canvas. The city council vision now is
for a smaller, shorter and more green central business
district.
Suburban Christchurch will also see drastic change, with some
red-zoned riverside eastern suburbs like Bexley and Avonside
virtually disappearing from the landscape.
Abandoned housing and commercial buildings are to be cleared
from these suburbs where the land is considered too costly to
repair, with only parks and grassland likely to be left in
their place.
Although this immense change is bringing a sense of loss for
many Christchurch people, it also presents huge
opportunities. Many who have chosen to stay after the quakes
cite as a reason the rare opportunity to be part of the
creation of a new city.
Some prominent overseas observers have already taken note of
the exciting possibilities that lie ahead.
Influential United States magazine Foreign Policy has ranked
Christchurch alongside New York and Singapore as one of the
world's top 10 cities to watch.
Christchurch came in at number nine, with Harvard University
economist Edward Glaeser saying: "A massive rebuilding effort
following [last] year's New Zealand earthquake is a unique
opportunity to rethink urban form.''
Internationally renowned publisher Lonely Planet recently
said Christchurch was re-emerging as one of New Zealand's
"most exciting cities''.
The Christchurch City Council draft plan for the central city
lays out a $2 billion vision of a "safe, sustainable,
high-tech, low-rise city in a garden''. This plan is now in
the hands of Earthquake Recovery Minister Gerry Brownlee for
consideration.
It proposes a more compact CBD characterised by new low-rise
buildings, no greater than six to seven storeys. Most of the
deaths in the February quake were in multi-storey buildings.
"Our people have told us very clearly, `we don't want to go
into those tall buildings any more','' said Christchurch
Mayor Bob Parker.
"They don't have a place in our city.''
Engineers have found most of the land in the central city is
safe to rebuild on, but liquefaction-prone areas closest to
the Avon River - which runs through central Christchurch -
will not be built on.
A proposed $406 million light rail system would connect the
city centre to Canterbury University in the northwest
suburbs.
In the suburbs, as some parts disappear, other parts will
grow.
New residential land in the north and west of Christchurch is
being fast-tracked for development to accommodate those
forced to leave the red-zoned land.
The future, though, for some people living in eastern and
hillside suburbs is still uncertain as they await further
instruction on whether they can stay put.
Mr Parker boldly sees Christchurch's future as a "world-class
city''.
"We would all rather [the earthquakes] hadn't happened, but
this is a chance to seize the moment. I don't think many
cities around the world have ever had this opportunity.''
- Jarrod Booker, New Zealand Herald
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