A company planning to build the Far North's biggest retirement village on a quiet Kerikeri street has committed to widening the road, installing a footpath and other "public good" projects around the town.
The agreement, struck between Auckland-based Arvida and the Far North District Council, is expected to allay Hall Rd residents' concerns about traffic safety on their narrow, dead-end street, and reassure ratepayers who feared they would end up paying for public infrastructure needed for the 18ha, $120 million development comprising 200 villas and apartments and an 80-bed care facility.
Hall Rd resident David Clendon was pleased to hear the good intentions of the council and Arvida, but they would now have to be supported by action that protected the interests of residents and the wider Kerikeri community.
Both mayor John Carter and council CEO Shaun Clarke had expressed their enthusiasm for the proposal, but similar statements of support for the legitimate concerns of existing ratepayers had been conspicuously absent.
"The comments about timing of roading and safety improvements are ambiguous; it is a bottom line for residents that this work must be done before any earthworks or construction begins," Mr Clendon said. "Residents in Rainbow Falls Rd, affected by the Quail Ridge development, are still waiting for a roading upgrade and footpaths six years after work on that project began."