The enjoyable British invasion of Auckland this week is a reminder that when the Lions' tour is over, the city has no more comparable events on its calendar. What better reason, then, than to bring back the America's Cup.
Ever since Emirates Team New Zealand went 3-0 up in the finals last weekend, we have all been trying not to count our chickens before they are hatched. Remember San Francisco. But we have failed. With Dennis Conner and just about everyone else involved in sailing telling us Peter Burling and his boat have the edge, and there is little Oracle Team USA can do to catch up, we have started looking ahead.
The first chicken to count is where the "village" could be. The favoured site for syndicate bases, we report today, is a wharf extension from the Viaduct, already planned but not scheduled. Protruding into the harbour, it would need to be of significant size to hold the barns and boat-launching facilities each syndicate would need. But it would be close enough to the Viaduct and the Wynyard Quarter to use them as "party central" for the Cup.
It is thanks to Team NZ's first tenure of the America's Cup that the Viaduct exists as we know it. Sir Peter Blake put pressure on public bodies to fund a purpose-built base for the defence and the former Auckland City Council's urban designers did the rest, ensuring it was a pleasant public place. Their work inspired, and was exceeded by, the design of North Wharf in the Wynyard Quarter. When it is remembered how much the America's Cup did for Auckland the first time it was here, a return visit would be welcomed.
Last time it was raced in monohulls in the Hauraki Gulf on a course visible from clifftops along the East Coast Bays. Now it is raced in foiling catamarans on shorter courses inside harbours. Next time there might be possibilities for many more vantage points around the Waitemata. But Team NZ have not yet given much detail of how they would use the defender's rights to dictate the terms of the event. They could even put the contest back into monohulls though if they have mastered the flying catamarans better than any team at Bermuda, why would they?