A famous Rolling Stone once said: "Writing about music is like dancing about architecture." In fact, and because Mick was taking the mickey out of blokes like me, I'm going to manipulate his words and say: architecture could very well make you want to dance. Especially down at the new Wynyard Quarter on Auckland's waterfront. If you ask me, with its collision of industrial beauty, wasteland-like architecture, and (soon to be) wide open green spaces, it is the perfect spot for a rock 'n' roll show and a good old-fashioned knees-ups.
There are rumours it could be the sight for next year's Laneway Festival - but more on those possibilities later.
Whether people like to admit it or not, everybody loves a little bit of metal on metal. A little rust. And a little bit of heavy duty decay like that exhibited on those gorgeous old tanks down at the tank farm.
Don't they? Well, I do. Maybe it's my sick - and I guess somewhat dated these days - obsession with industrial music of the kind that's cold, punishing, and minimal. It's powerful stuff, honest. Or maybe my love of these metal structures and their many appendages like pipes, giant taps and stairwells, simply comes down to how aesthetically cool and intriguing they look.
It's this rusty, reinforced steel back-drop, mixed with future parkland to be developed that makes the Wynyard Quarter - the first part of a 25-year, $120 million development - such an impressive playground for Auckland.