Christchurch
businesses abandon CBD - research
About
half of the businesses which left the Christchurch CBD after the
Canterbury earthquakes are not likely to return, research has found.
25
September, 2012
After
the February 22 earthquake last year, most the central city, which
lies between the Four Avenues, was closed down. Before the quake, the
area was home to about 6,000 businesses, employing 50,000 people.
University
of Canterbury researchers said the new CBD will have a different mix
of businesses, and new long-term concentrations of businesses will
emerge outside the central city.
Professor
Simon Kemp, who supervised the research, said the CBD will initially
house fewer businesses than it previously did.
The
research project asked 209 businesses if they were satisfied with
their new locations and whether they intended to return to the
central city.
"Many
businesses were content with their new premises and law firms said
they were more likely to return to the CBD than financial service
organisations. Building height did not emerge as a major issue, but
rents may be," Mr Kemp said.
"Types
of business not so likely to return include many retailers, those
offering financial services and businesses that are concerned with
making or repairing things. The longer businesses stay away, the less
likely they are to return.
"A
large number of businesses that used to be in the centre of
Christchurch relocated after the earthquakes. The overall chance of
return for bigger businesses was greater (55 per cent) than for small
ones (42 per cent). Some types of business are more likely to return
than others. For example, many legal concerns are likely to return -
so as to be near the courts."
Mr
Kemp said planning for other commercial areas outside the central
city where many businesses have relocated to, such as Riccarton,
Addington and Sydenham, would probably be worth undertaking.
"The
earthquakes drove many businesses to the suburbs, but some would have
gone anyway. We would not expect all the relocated businesses to
return to the CBD and, indeed, it might be better both for many of
the businesses themselves and for the Christchurch community as a
whole if they did not. Indeed, the plans for a new, more compact
inner city suggest that there might not be space in the central city
for all of them.
"This
is not the only piece of research that has looked at how Christchurch
businesses are planning for the future. We encourage people to
consider our research as one piece of the jigsaw and to look also at
these other sources of information. The picture is complex and
constantly changing.
"Businesses
have tended to relocate to the west of the city (Riccarton,
Addington, or a little further out). Secondly, most have not moved
very far (Riccarton or Addington rather than Harewood, for example;
or Sydenham rather than St. Martins)," Professor Kemp said.
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