Auckland City Centre Residents' Group - CCRG

Auckland City Centre Residents' Group - CCRG Auckland City Centre Residents Group. Commonly referred to by the acronym ‘CCRG’. We publish regular e-newsletters. Members get to vote at our monthly meetings.

Ngā kainoho o Te Pokapu o Tāmaki - A Voice since 2005, for Auckland's 40,000+ City Centre Residents, advocating to make our City Centre/Pokapū Tāone a better place. We are a volunteer, non-profit registered incorporated society, & our purpose is to represent – as a policy lobbying & stakeholder group advocate – Auckland City Centre residents, & their interests & concerns, to Auckland Council & an

y other agency whose actions affect us. As of 2020, there are approximately 42,000 City Centre residents, across well over 20,000 rateable properties. Established in 2005, CCRG is managed by an annually elected committee that meets monthly. We encourage residents to join us - CCRG membership is $25 per year. However, any resident, member or not, may attend & participate in our monthly meetings. We also have affiliate and associate memberships for those not fortunate enough to live in the city centre but who still want to be involved! The City Centre is 433 hectares in size. ‘City Centre’ has replaced ‘CBD’ in Council parlance, a phrase that doesn't represent people who live here and so to better reflect the varied groups that now live in & use the city centre. We have had a regular track-record of participatory submissions in public consultation & before committees, including Auckland Council committees, strategies, planning, policies & actions affecting City Centre Residents, & the greater city. We work regularly with Auckland Council & its CCOs, & with Waitematā Local Board. The City Centre has a special targeted rate levied on it – over & above the general rates - on both commercial as well as the residential City Centre ratepayers. Over the current 10 year plan this amounts to a figure of approximately $220M. This targeted rate is applied to defined projects or purposes that are aligned with the Auckland City Centre Masterplan. This fund often provides a higher level of infrastructure works & service than would otherwise be possible. There are many visible signs of his money being put to good work, from the new shared spaces, to homelessness initiatives. To provide advice Council in making decisions on the use of the targeted rate, the Mayor establishes the Auckland City Centre Advisory Board (ACCAB), & CCRG is the recognised Residents stakeholder group on the board, having two seats out of 19. The nineteen-member City Centre Advisory Board consists of identified representative City Centre stakeholder group sectors as: corporate (financial/professional); urban design/architecture; tourism/travel; Business Improvement Districts (HOTCity & KBA); retail; education (Univ. of Auckland& AUT); Ngāti Whātua o Orakei; Residents (2 reps from CCRG); Property Council; arts/culture; Governing Body (The Mayor & Waitematā & Gulf Ward Councillor – Pippa Coom); Waitematā Local Board (Richard Northey). ACCAB meets monthly to review progress & monitor City Centre Transformation Projects’ budgets & spending; receive advice & act on timely relevant City Centre issues; provide a forum for all participants’ perspectives; & initiate review & research needed for further professional City Centre decision-making. CCRG has seven policy areas in which it is actively working. The below are a summary - These are currently:

Transport:
Prioritising active modes, particularly pedestrian & cycling, reducing traffic speeds,
Supporting Access For Everyone
CRL, City centre bus terminal

Parks, Community & Lifestyle:
Public spaces, trees, community facilities, homelessness

Environmental Management & Regulation:
Noise management, Air Quality, commercial rubbish collection, alcohol abuse

Auckland Development:
Multi-unit developments, UTA Reform, Ports of Auckland expansion, housing affordability

Economic & Cultural:
Place making

Governance & Support:
ACCAB, engagement with city centre residents

Water & Wastewater:
Discharge to harbour/water quality

CCRG is always open to hearing residents’ opinions. We meet monthly (Info on our meetings is posted on our page), & urge you to come & watch, listen, join in, & vote to make the City a better more liveable place.

There are some resonating statements in this article on city centre apartment living with families."Rather than a privat...
07/06/2026

There are some resonating statements in this article on city centre apartment living with families.

"Rather than a private backyard, the city has become part of his playground. The apartment complex has a shared roof area and a small veggie pod. Nearby are parks, libraries and the waterfront."

And what a diverse stimulating playground of experiences it is. For young and old, and all in between..

and

"Silva said Auckland was still “immature” in how it thought about apartment living, and needed to better recognise the city centre - not 'CBD' - as a place where people lived full-time.'

Ain't that the truth. Captive at times, to a parochial 1960's suburban mind set & culture amongst too many of our decision makers who are happy to deprioritise residents here at the drop of a hat. Too often we get gaslit with 'you chose to live here' but that never seems to apply to them and their choice to live far away and demand the city centre bend to their every personal wish and need.

Time to be lot more mature and grown up like other cities in the world. Time to meaningfully create the right support for existing residents, and the conditions to welcome many more. ✅

Attached homes - including apartments - have made up the majority of city’s new dwelling consents in recent years.

Mōrena. Uni walk. Icons old and new. 🌆🌃😎😍
06/06/2026

Mōrena. Uni walk. Icons old and new. 🌆🌃😎😍

Have you tried council's new experimental report a problem online assistant?  'Ask Auckland ' https://www.aucklandcounci...
06/06/2026

Have you tried council's new experimental report a problem online assistant? 'Ask Auckland ' https://www.aucklandcouncil.govt.nz/en/ask-auckland-council-online-assistant.html

First issue is that this landing page is way too long and detailed - just take us to the assistant already?

Anyway, give it a go, and if you have then please comment below on how it went for you so we can get good encouragement and/or feedback to council. This is trial or experiment as they say. and we all want a quick, easy, efficient system to report everyday issues, that sees quick action.
Also, Is anyone still using Snap Send Solve?

Ask Auckland Council is an online assistant that helps you report problems to Auckland Council using your smartphone or computer.

Another wonderful seedling planting workshop at Myers Park cottage today showing that there’s a real hunger for learning...
06/06/2026

Another wonderful seedling planting workshop at Myers Park cottage today showing that there’s a real hunger for learning how to grow your own plants, vegetables and herbs, even in constrained spaces like apartments. Incredibly, each of these trays can have 4 -500 seedlings. Including natives. After two weekends of these workshops there are now tens of thousands of seedlings and life-giving plants out there in the neighbourhoods.
Awesome work from Lifewise Aaiotanga Community Space and Levi Brindson-Hall from Delicious Revolution
🙏 to city centre targeted rate too. 
🌱🌆😍😎

Wynyard Quarter is a long term development programme, multi decades, almost multi generational, governed by its own rule...
05/06/2026

Wynyard Quarter is a long term development programme, multi decades, almost multi generational, governed by its own rules in the Unitary Plan, and regulatory requirements around ensuring it doesn't get swamped with cars and car parking.

There is even a group set up as part of that regulatory framework to keep an eye on all that and encourager multi modal transport options- check out WQTMA lots o fino there https://www.wqtma.co.nz/plansandreports

AT is required by the WQ regulatory framework to undertake regular traffic surveyshttp://www.aucklandcity.govt.nz/council/documents/central/pdfs/annexure18.pdf

From Fanshawe street to the Te Ara Tukutuku Point.
Plenty of residential to the north. Despite some smart architecture, the southern end is rather visually bland as a whole with all its same same heights boxes.

You can see the developments pipeline. North wharf has development plans, as does site 18 with some 24 level heights proposed. There's also talk of a plan change to allow greater heights across the quarter.

Being a more recently planned quarter it has great green spaces, wide footpaths and arguably the best amenity in Tāmaki for dense urban living. Stunning open spaces, art/mahi too, parks, events and event spaces and activations. Cafes , restaurants a supermarket and wonderful Daldy Street Community Garden - Wynyard Quarter. A great place to live with refreshing sea air at hand.

But like many other parts of the city, the quarter also suffers from the 100kph+ car racing and outrageous noise from illegally modified engines/speakers etc. Serious Safety and Health issues that the responsible authorities seem helpless to, or unwilling to try and address.
That is definitely a setting that needs to be addressed to ensure liveability and safety.

There's a lot more to come for WQ.

Mōrena   🏙️
05/06/2026

Mōrena 🏙️

The exhibition has even been extended outside to celebrate the St James Theatre's heritage along its hoardings on Lorne ...
05/06/2026

The exhibition has even been extended outside to celebrate the St James Theatre's heritage along its hoardings on Lorne Street.

👏 Have you checked out the Encore! exhibition at the Central City Library?

It's a chance to explore how live music has shaped central Tāmaki Makaurau from iconic venues, unforgettable performances and the musicians and audiences who were there.

The exhibition has even been extended outside to celebrate the St James Theatre's heritage along its hoardings on Lorne Street.

It's totally free and on until 29 August.

🔗 Head to https://bit.ly/encore-cc to learn

Timely reminder that Matariki approaches - always celebratory in terms of pokapū tāone/city centre, with plenty to exper...
05/06/2026

Timely reminder that Matariki approaches - always celebratory in terms of pokapū tāone/city centre, with plenty to experience and enjoy.
Manawatia a Matariki 2026
2026 THEME
Matariki herenga waka/Matariki, the gathering of canoes

4 – 19 o Hōngongoi
4 – 19 July

Did you know that the city centre does have one remaining daylit stream running along the western side of Grafton Gully?...
04/06/2026

Did you know that the city centre does have one remaining daylit stream running along the western side of Grafton Gully? Waipāruru Stream. It is captured by underground pipes before being discharged to the sea at the port. There's been a project to restore the open areas, once w**d infested and rubbish filled. The 2023 storm did some damage but the area has recovered quickly. A clear example of the value of resilient natural waterways that can expand, contract and recover from events. Something that stormwater pipes struggle with, as the 2023 major flooding of the Strand area proved. Build larger and larger underground pipes or....?
The local board has been supporting these efforts and there is a comprehensive 2019 reporthttps://mcusercontent.com/98de277306e858b755987f889/files/823444ad-7116-2433-0285-6dfc5d523e15/Waiparuru_Ecolgical_restoratoin_Plan_WLB_agdaJul19.pdf

Address

2 Freyberg Place
Auckland
1010

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