Varsity buying, closing bar

The University of Otago is in the process of buying the Gardens Tavern and will close the popular student bar.

The decision has left the students trying to keep it open distraught.

"I was pretty gutted, pretty distraught when I heard. My flatmates were almost in tears, and I was not far from tears myself," Blake Luff told the Otago Daily Times yesterday.

He and flatmates Nathan Parker and Tom McKnight launched a campaign this week to try to convince 2000 students to invest $2500 each so a company could be set up and a loan raised to buy the drinking hole.

"The Gardies" has been a student institution since it opened in the 1960s.

Mr Luff said the response to the campaign to keep the tradition alive had been overwhelming.

"My phone was going non-stop all day and I had emails from Auckland, south. From the number of people who were wanting to commit, I think it would have been realistic to get 200 investors.

"But that dream ended yesterday when the university issued a two-paragraph media release saying it had made an offer last week to buy the tavern and the offer had been accepted.

There were "certain conditions" attached to the sale which had not yet been resolved, the statement said.

Assuming the sale was confirmed, several alternative uses for the building and grounds would be considered before a recommendation was made to the university council, the release said.

When contacted, university head of communications Megan McPherson said the substance of the conditions was commercially sensitive.

She confirmed the alternative uses the university were considering did not include keeping the premises open as a bar.

The 2080sq m tavern site in Castle St, near the Dunedin Botanic Garden, has a rateable value of $1.025 million.

It is understood the university may have paid $1.5 million for the property, but Ms McPherson would not confirm that, saying the price was confidential.

The tavern is owned by Gardies Ltd.

Majority shareholder Peter Innes-Jones could not be reached for comment last night.

In March last year, the university bought the Bowling Green Hotel in Frederick St to convert into teaching and research spaces for the medical school.

Mr Luff said he and his friends would be organising a "last hurrah" event.

"We'll definitely be doing something ... to mourn the loss of a close friend."

- allison.rudd@odt.co.nz

 

No surprise

The University of Otago campus strategy is for a block from Frederick St to the Gardens and from Cumberland St to the Leith. One block of essentially private land that doesn't pay rates. It might take 20-25 years to get there, but that's the vision.

Gardens Tavern

Goodbye to the Gardens. What a sad sack university.

Seeing as the reason that...

Seeing as the reason that Gardies was for sale in the first place was because it was no longer profitable, it seems fairly evident that it's the students themselves who are causing this change to the drinking culture (drinking at home and "on the streets").
Yes, the Uni bought the property, and no, they won't be running it as a bar, but the thing that the media keeps missing is that the Uni snaps up ANY land in the area because it is growing at an alarming rate and needs the space, not because they wanna be the fun police (although I'm sure this is a nice fringe benefit). Reports keep mentioning the Uni's purchase of the Bowler, but not its purchase of Abbey Lodge (right across the road from Gardies!), the Whitcliff Press site, and the land that now houses the Hunter Centre.

The University will be culpable

And all the backlash you're likely to hear in the media is that they're stopping students from having fun.
Unfortunately, that's not the case.
Students won't stop drinking because of this. Some will go to different bars - ones outside the student area - but most, I suspect, will do their drinking on the streets.
Nice one, University.
How many times will you make the problem worse before you realise what you've done?

Oh how they fall

First the Oriental now the Gardens Tavern soon the Cook by the looks of it and very near Sammy's recently. What a sad town Dunedin is going to be when the fun police are finished.