By Campbell McIlroy
Friday 10th March 2000 |
Text too small? |
The development would be mixed use residential, retail, and office space in nine buildings.
The central feature is a circular building containing retail space on the ground floor with office and then residential space above.
The circular building sits in the centre of a city block and would be surrounded by another eight individually designed residential buildings, with a small amount of retail to satisfy zoning requirements.
The residential buildings would form the outer perimeter of what Symphony director Chris Minty described as a walled city. With the circular building at its centre, the space between would contain landscaped gardens for residents.
Symphony was applying for resource consents and had worked hard to deliver a balance of security and privacy right in the middle of the action in the Viaduct Basin, Mr Minty said.
No comments yet
WCO - Acquisition of Civic Waste, Convertible Note & SPP
ATM - FY25 revenue guidance and dividend policy
November 22th Morning Report
General Capital Announces Another Profit Record
Infratil Considers Infrastructure Bond Offer
Argosy FY25 Interim Result
Meridian Energy monthly operating report for October 2024
Du Val failure offers fresh lessons, but will they be heeded in the long term?
November 19th Morning Report
ATM - Appointment of new independent NED