Nature In My Backyard - Christchurch

Nature In My Backyard - Christchurch Creating a better Christchurch by growing and protecting our communities, trees and natural spaces. We have the opportunity to make this happen.

One of the reasons that so many people love living in Christchurch City is because we are a garden city with the stark beauty of the Port Hills as our backdrop and the mountains and sea close by. But imagine if we could bring nature even closer to our doorstep. Imagine if we could connect with nature in our own backyards; every time we step outside. Cities don’t need to be concrete jungles dominated by buildings and roads. They can be buzzing with nature and filled with trees and green spaces.

On a beautiful sunny winters day like it is here today in Christchurch, it's an absolute travesty that the Christchurch ...
02/08/2025

On a beautiful sunny winters day like it is here today in Christchurch, it's an absolute travesty that the Christchurch City Council have decided to reject access to sunlight as a qualifying matter in terms of property developers erecting multi storied structures that WILL rob neighbouring residents properties, homes, gardens and solar roof panels of sunlight.

The vision of restoring native habitats along the Ōtākaro Avon River Corridor (OARC) is commendable and widely supported...
09/05/2025

The vision of restoring native habitats along the Ōtākaro Avon River Corridor (OARC) is commendable and widely supported. However, portraying the multi-million-dollar asphalt City to Sea Pathway as a "model of sustainability" is misleading and overlooks critical environmental and safety concerns.

Advocates claim the pathway exemplifies climate adaptation, yet its construction on land well below the Avon River's floodplain in South Richmond contradicts this assertion and ignores the fact changing weather patterns and sea level rise - both of which are brought on by climate change - are going to have an increasingly frequent impact on Christchurch and the Avon River.

The recent heavy rainfall event earlier this month led to the river overflowing its banks, not only shutting both northbound lanes and a southbound lane on Fitzgerald Avenue (where the Avon routinely floods the road), but also completely submerging significant sections of the City to Sea Pathway under nearly knee-deep floodwaters, rendering what is being described as a 'transport corridor' completely impassable. This outcome is not indicative of adaptive design but rather a predictable consequence of placing impermeable infrastructure within a known flood zone. Let's not ignore the fact the Christchurch City Council were advising people to stay well clear of flood waters due to the dangers they pose.

The City to Sea Pathway traverses land identified by the Council commissioned Liquefaction Vulnerability Maps as being of the highest susceptibility to liquefaction, lateral spread, and severe ground deformation during seismic events, all of which are detrimental to infrastructure. This same land was red-zoned post-earthquakes for being too unstable to rebuild upon—a fact seemingly overlooked in defenses of the City to Sea Pathway project by its advocates.

Contrary to what Hayley Guglietta, Spokesperson for Otakaro Avon River Corridor, wrote, asphalt surfaces do not absorb water; instead, they accelerate stormwater runoff, increasing both the speed and volume of water flow, which can exacerbate flooding. This contrasts sharply with natural flood management strategies that utilize features like wetlands, forests, and trees to absorb and slow down floodwaters.

Moreover, the construction of the pathway involved hours and hours of diesel-fueled heavy machinery, pumping greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere.

If sustainability and environmental foresight were truly at the forefront, the project would have prioritized reforestation and the enhancement of natural flood defenses over the installation of an asphalt pathway. Vegetation, particularly trees and shrubs, plays a crucial role in mitigating flood risks by absorbing rainwater, enhancing soil infiltration, and slowing floodwaters.

Investing in infrastructure on land known for its high liquefaction and flooding risks raises serious questions about the project's long-term viability and alignment with sustainable practices. True sustainability involves working with natural systems to create resilient and adaptive urban environments.

Redirecting funds towards reforestation of the riverbanks and surrounding land within the floodplain and the development of stormwater retention basins would offer more enduring benefits, both environmentally and fiscally, than a pathway likely to require costly repairs or replacement in the future.

The Council's decision to proceed with this pathway reflects a disregard for established environmental risks and a misrepresentation of sustainable practices. It's imperative to critically reevaluate such projects to ensure they genuinely align with principles of ecological resilience and fiscal responsibility.

"Trees replaced by concrete.  Lawns replaced by concrete.  Gardens replaced with concrete.  Carbon footprints that have ...
10/02/2025

"Trees replaced by concrete. Lawns replaced by concrete. Gardens replaced with concrete. Carbon footprints that have been locked up in 100 year old character homes will be released into the environment"

None of any of those actions are even remotely environmentaly friendly in a city that's declared BOTH a Climate and an Ecological Emergency.

The edict of greed driven property developers bulldozing character homes such as the one on the front page of The Press today is that it's "ok" because they're "pretty tired". That quite frankly an absolute crock of sh*te - a narrative to nullify the environmental vandalism the so called "develooers" are inflicting on our city along with the ecological destruction and butchering of long established neighbourhoods!

It's time that City Councillors who position themselves as being "Climate Conscious" and "Concerned about the Environment" start putting their money where their mouth is and started walking the walk, rather than simply posturing.

Talk is cheap.

26/01/2025

What can't a tree do?

https://www.chrislynchmedia.com/news-items/symbolic-trees-spared-as-council-postpones-removal-from-emmett-and-riselaw-st...
17/01/2025

https://www.chrislynchmedia.com/news-items/symbolic-trees-spared-as-council-postpones-removal-from-emmett-and-riselaw-streets/

Are the Christchurch City Council incompetent, or simply hypocrites when it comes to protecting the natural environment and the wellbeing of residents in our city?

In terms of embedding regular tree maintenance it's evident they've dropped the ball here for decades.
In terms of creating deeper inequity between the wealthy suburbs and those a lot less fortunate, well, this certainly highlights the gross shortcomings of the CCC.

The Christchurch City Council has paused its plans to remove 20 large trees from Emmett and Riselaw Streets following opposition...

House prices in Christchurch remain stable despite an oversupply of apartments in the central city in particular.  OneRo...
07/01/2025

House prices in Christchurch remain stable despite an oversupply of apartments in the central city in particular. OneRoof reports Auckland, Hamilton, Tauranga and Wellington have all seen house prices fall over the past year. If Christchurch prices fall, we might see developments abandoned to the weeds, like is happening in Auckland.

“Its been a real mystery for everyone in the area,” say neighbours of one of a number of seemingly abandoned, graffiti-covered “eyesores”.

This is the unintended but entirely predictable consequence of developer-led intensification in Christchurch. Benefits f...
27/12/2024

This is the unintended but entirely predictable consequence of developer-led intensification in Christchurch.
Benefits for some (lower prices) results in disaster for those who were enticed into buying these 'affordable' homes at the peak of a low interest market.
Developers were the only winners. They built cheap, sold quickly and walked away.
Simple-thinkers will be celebrating this townhouse glut because it makes these properties even cheaper, but DON'T BE TEMPTED. They are cheap in more ways than one.
Most will be B&Bs, short-term rentals and the tree-less slums of the future... a blight on our Garden City.

Christchurch’s property market is being flooded with hundreds of new or near-new two-bedroom townhouses - and agents say there are far more for...

Quakes forgotten. The new face of inner city Christchurch facing the river on Oxford Tce. Spot the Pegasus Arms.
02/12/2024

Quakes forgotten. The new face of inner city Christchurch facing the river on Oxford Tce. Spot the Pegasus Arms.

Lot's of positive comments have been made about perimeter block developments.  Perimeter block housing (utilising space ...
29/11/2024

Lot's of positive comments have been made about perimeter block developments. Perimeter block housing (utilising space in the middle) seems great for providing a large open sunny space, but is maybe not for everyone.
They are inward looking, a bit like schools, where outdoor recreation spaces are internalised within the complex; and where space is allocated to private gardens or is communal. With everyone looking at everyone else you'd need to get on with the neighbours.
It would be good to hear from people who live in these blocks. What is it like? Are there trees and gardens? What are the social rules, how well are the outdoor spaces used and maintained, and how are issues like maintenance managed?

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