$6.76m project transforms urban park
Media release
5 July 2012
$6.76m project transforms urban
park
A $6.76 million remediation
project at an urban Auckland park is being hailed as an
environmental triumph.
Newmarket Park, a 6ha reserve nestled between the suburbs of Newmarket, Parnell and Remuera and with sweeping views across Hobson Bay, reopens officially with a public family open day on Sunday 15 July.
The celebration will mark the completion of two and a half years of capital works, during which time much of the park was closed.
The works included stabilising a 350 metre slope to stop subsidence, removing landfill material, improving the drainage systems and planting 10,000 native trees.
Waitemata Local Board chair Shale Chambers, who will open the park at the family day, says welcoming children and families back into the space is a powerful testament to the success of the project.
"A number of risks and dangers have been fixed to make the park fit for public use. Additional restoration work also gives people an attractive environmental haven to enjoy," says Mr Chambers. "As growth in our region puts more and more pressure on available recreational space, this is a fantastic result for all Aucklanders."
Auckland Council environmental services manager Janis McArdle says from the 200 plus sites listed on the council’s closed landfills asset management plan, Newmarket Park was the highest priority to address.
"This was not the first closed landfill we've tackled, with Phyllis Street Reserve in Mt Albert, Seddon Fields in Pt Chevalier and Seaside Park in Otahuhu completed in the past decade. However, Newmarket Park is our largest and most complex project to date, and I am immensely pleased by the work that has been done to bring this park to the standard we see today. I believe it will mature into something spectacular in coming years."
The council is now scoping a $4 million project at Waikowhai Park, once known as the Blockhouse Bay tip.
Ends
Editor’s note:
A
landfill was in operation at Newmarket Park from the 1930s
to the 1940s. The park was also a recreational site for
athletics and midget car racing. In 1962, Auckland Football
leased the site, but a landslide destroyed a grandstand and
part of the field in 1979. The park was regarded as the
‘spiritual home’ of New Zealand football, with a number
of internationals played there. An Auckland v Tottenham
Hotspur match in 1976 resulted in a 5-3 win to the
visitors.
Photographs of the park will be available on request.
Details on the works:
The project has
addressed problems created by a 350-metre unstable southern
slope. Major slips had occurred over the years and would
have continued for decades had the council not taken
comprehensive action.
Contaminated landfill material has
been removed from the park and the southern slope has been
graded back with an engineered cap and stabilised. The
drainage systems to the west of the park have also been
upgraded to direct water into the Newmarket Stream and away
from the closed landfill.
Around 10,000 high-quality native trees planted at the park will mature into forest, contributing to the stability of the slope and founding what is expected to form an urban haven for flora and fauna.