Christchurch: 'When they go high, we go low'

Christchurch: 'When they go high, we go low'
One of Christchurch's tallest new residential buildings, The Spire, on Kilmore St. (Image: Oliver Lewis)
Oliver Lewis
Ever since the earthquakes, Christchurch has been a kind of bonsai city, defined by its relative lack of height. The tallest building in the city, the 86-metre Pacific Tower on Gloucester St, was completed in 2010, the same year the Canterbury earthquake sequence started. As a result of the quakes, more than 1200 buildings within the four avenues were demolished.Perhaps unsurprisingly, developers have been wary of building up since. And why would they? Compared to cities like Wellington and Auckland, Christchurch has an abundance of land,...

More Infrastructure

Port of Tauranga ‘reluctantly’ doubles MetroPort rail fees
Primary Sector

Port of Tauranga ‘reluctantly’ doubles MetroPort rail fees

The port says it's working with KiwiRail on 'long-term arrangements'. 

‘Bluewater backbone’: Lyttelton, Auckland ports plan $1b+ of upgrades
Policy

‘Bluewater backbone’: Lyttelton, Auckland ports plan $1b+ of upgrades

Two of the biggest NZ ports are raising prices as they plan major investments.

Oliver Lewis 02 Jul 2025
Cost of Ōtaki to north of Levin highway nears $2b
Infrastructure

Cost of Ōtaki to north of Levin highway nears $2b

In 2020, the lower North Island expressway was costed at just $817m.

Oliver Lewis 01 Jul 2025
The keys to unlocking Northport's land value
Infrastructure

The keys to unlocking Northport's land value

MMH's land is valued at five times less than its next-door neighbour, Channel.

Ian Llewellyn 30 Jun 2025