Contributors to the media have been highly critical of the residential apartment buildings that have sprung up in the Auckland CBD since the mid-1990s.
In many cases, their criticisms have been justified based on poor architectural and in some cases structural practices that were applied to a few of these buildings. But they have tended to talk about Auckland CBD residents as if some form of sub-human species, who are forced to live in "shoe boxes", "rabbit hutches", "tiny concrete cells reminiscent of Eastern European and British Council housing allotments" and "vertical slums", without acknowledging the contribution that these buildings and their owners make to the economic welfare of New Zealand's largest city.
They also suggest all occupants are transient Asian students, without bothering to check the make-up of the population of the CBD, which exceeds 30,000 residents and has a broad range of ethnicities, cultures, age groups and religions that probably surpasses any other area of this size in the country.
Since the release of the draft Auckland Unitary Plan, the criticism has stepped up a gear and once again the contributors are focusing on the one or two very ugly buildings in the Auckland CBD, as if all future developments throughout the greater Auckland area, where high- and medium-rise buildings are proposed, will emulate this handful. I'm pretty sure Auckland has learned its lesson.
But let's get back to the apartment buildings that have been constructed over these past few years. They vary from large, luxurious residential apartments through to a large number of small studio units which the average suburbanite may find challenging as a residence. But, apart from those that are owned by Housing New Zealand, all others are owned on a unit title by individuals, corporations or trusts, resulting in many millions of dollars having been invested into the initial capital works.