Auckland Transport (AT) is currently taking account of the 5817 public submissions received on the draft Regional Land Transport Plan for 2021 - 2031. The draft RLTP is the 10-year investment plan for Auckland’s transport network. It details the .
Press Release – Auckland Transport Auckland Transport (AT) is currently taking account of the 5817 public submissions received on the draft Regional Land Transport Plan for 2021 – 2031. The draft RLTP is the 10-year investment plan for Aucklands transport network. It details the …
Auckland Transport (AT) is currently taking account of the 5817 public submissions received on the draft Regional Land Transport Plan for 2021 – 2031.
The draft RLTP is the 10-year investment plan for Auckland’s transport network. It details the areas that Auckland Transport, Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency and KiwiRail will focus on to respond to our region’s transport challenges.
While individual feedback is currently being analysed, some key themes are:
Housing crisis: Exclusive data shows the suburbs Auckland s new houses are being built in
7 May, 2021 05:00 PM
4 minutes to read
New Zealand s affordable housing crisis explained. Video / NZ Herald
Ben Leahy is a reporter for the New Zealand HeraldBen.Leahy@nzherald.co.nz
Auckland is in the middle of a building boom with more than 17,000 new homes completed across the city in the past two years, exclusive new data has revealed.
Hobsonville, in the city s north west, had the most building activity as its 1795 completed builds since the start of 2019, included 944 new houses, 618 townhouses and flats and 233 new apartments.
Flat Bush, in the south east, with 1383 homes was the suburb with the second most finished new builds, the Weekend Herald and its data partner Valocity found.
115 new homes in 2 years: Life on one of Auckland s fastest changing streets
7 May, 2021 05:00 PM
15 minutes to read
Architecture student Siosaia Tu itupou and his mother Stephanie moved to Hall Ave in Māngere in 2016. Photo / Dean Purcell
Architecture student Siosaia Tu itupou and his mother Stephanie moved to Hall Ave in Māngere in 2016. Photo / Dean Purcell
Ben Leahy is a reporter for the New Zealand HeraldBen.Leahy@nzherald.co.nz
Whole streets of brand new housing are springing up all over Auckland as the city starts building again. But will the new homes solve our housing crisis and how do the people living in these
Letters: Auckland growth, property investors, vaccination pace and light rail
12 Apr, 2021 05:00 PM
9 minutes to read
Is central Auckland already too densely populated? Photo / Michael Craig
NZ Herald
Groan pains After being put up this week in an Auckland CBD accommodation unit, 14 floors up, looking out over similarly small units, with many even higher up, I can see why your editorial (NZ Herald, April 9) makes perfect sense.
Indeed, we have a rather sparsely populated nation, where an absolutely unexpected newcomer, called Covid-19, has forced many of us to reinvent ourselves; work from home part-time; all the time or even have a fully remote-controlled business model.