Downtown Shopping Centre

Downtown Shopping Centre, formerly Westfield Downtown, was a smaller shopping centre with 12,417 m² gross lettable area[1] in the Auckland CBD, Auckland City, New Zealand. It was situated at 11–19 Customs Street West between Lower Albert Street and the Britomart Transport Centre. In late 2012, it was sold by Westfield to Precinct Properties Holdings New Zealand Limited,[2] formerly AMP NZ Office Limited (ANZO). After 41 years, it closed on 28 May 2016 and by 23 November had been demolished. A highrise was built on the site and a new mall, with the future City Rail Link going through the foundations of the building.

Downtown Shopping Centre
Westfield Downtown as seen from the Queen Street intersection, looking north
LocationAuckland CBD
Coordinates36°50′39″S 174°45′58″E
Opening date30 April 1975 (30 April 1975)
Closing date28 May 2016 (28 May 2016)
ManagementColliers International Real Estate Management
OwnerPrecinct Properties New Zealand
No. of stores and services86
No. of anchor tenants3
Total retail floor area12,417 m2 (133,660 sq ft)
No. of floors3
Parkingnone
Websitewww.downtownshoppingcentre.co.nz

Shopping centre

The centre (opened 30 April 1975) had approximately 80 stores on three floors, with the three major stores being The Warehouse, Warehouse Stationery and Postie Plus.[1] It was one of the few Westfield Group malls that did not provide a supermarket, but was also the only proper mall in the entire CBD area. In later years it was also known for being covered almost completely by huge exterior billboards, which repeatedly drew the ire of Council officers.[3]

In 2005, the centre had retail sales of NZ$56.9 million, and 5.8 million customer visits per year. These were mostly CBD workers, tourists and the growing inner-city population.[1][4] However, the centre had been called Westfield's most underperforming shopping centre in New Zealand. Lying in the middle of a much more densely built up CBD and being considered underdeveloped with only three storeys above ground, various other plans for the site were mooted during its latter years. The centre was valued at NZ$79.1 million (2009 data).[5]

Commercial Bay

Downtown Shopping Centre after demolition
The first shop, an H&M store, in the new Commercial Bay development in Auckland in 2018

In 2008, Westfield received approval via non-notified resource consent for a 41-storey office skyscraper (including a 2 level retail podium) on the site.[6] The permission came under fire, as it was granted without protection requirements for a future rail tunnel from Britomart Transport Centre, which would have to pass under the building.[7] However, in October 2008, ONTRACK noted that it had reached an agreement in principle with the owners of Westfield Downtown to allow the tunnel route to be threaded through the future foundations.[8]

The Downtown Shopping Centre closed on 28 May 2016 after 41 years and by 23 November had been demolished. It is being replaced with a 36-storey skyscraper which will include a new shopping centre that includes a supermarket, bars, restaurants and food outlets in the lower levels.[9][10] Auckland Council and proprietors Precinct Properties struck a deal to include tunnels for the City Rail Link directly underneath the premises.[11][12]

The new development is named "Commercial Bay", whose name is referred back to the area's previous name in the 1900s.[13] The first shop of the new Commercial Bay development, an H&M store, was opened in August 2018.[14] Following multiple delays, the main shopping mall of the new Commercial Bay development was completed in June 2020.[15]

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gollark: Controversialer idea: no `\n`, no `{}`, only infinite endless brackets.
gollark: You might think "but gollark, how can you be bothered to type that" - obviously my IDE does it.
gollark: I indent with a space, then a tab, then a randomly selected invisible Unicode character.
gollark: Better than the python one, at least.

See also

References

  1. Westfield Downtown Archived 8 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine (from the Westfield Group corporate homepage. Retrieved 15 August 2007.)
  2. "Another Westfield mall sold". National Business Review - nbr.co.nz. 11 December 2012. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  3. Councillors stand fast against more Downtown signage Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback MachineThe Bob Dey Property Report, Tuesday 20 September 2005. Retrieved 15 August 2007.
  4. Gibson, Anne (17 April 2006). "Mega mall looms over retailers". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  5. "Westfield NZ property portfolio slips below $3 billion". National Business Review. NZPA. 17 February 2010. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  6. Public get no say on waterside skyscraperThe New Zealand Herald, Tuesday 22 April 2008, A1
  7. Rudman, Brian (5 May 2008). "Brian Rudman: Rubber-stamp for Westfield's 41-storey monstrosity beggars belief". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  8. Dearnaley, Mathew (14 October 2008). "Tunnel deal brings rail loop step closer". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  9. Debrin Foxcroft (23 August 2019). "Commercial Bay targeting the needs of an intensified Auckland CBD". Stuff News.
  10. Aimee Shaw (16 April 2019). "Revealed: The bars, restaurants and food outlets coming to Auckland's Commercial Bay". The New Zealand Herald.
  11. Catherine Gaffaney (22 May 2016). "Last week for shoppers at Auckland downtown mall". NZ Herald.
  12. "Watch $850m project: preparing for NZ's biggest commercial development". NZ Herald. 23 November 2016. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  13. Alice Peacock (29 September 2018). "The front door of the city: A step back in time to Auckland's waterfront in the 1900s". The New Zealand Herald.
  14. Aimee Shaw (30 August 2018). "Hundreds queue for H&M's flagship store opening". The New Zealand Herald.
  15. "$1b Commercial Bay delayed even further: no shops, offices till next year". The New Zealand Herald. 29 May 2019.
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