Opponents include Catholic Bishop Patrick Dunn, heritage advocate Allan Matson and SkyCity.
Heather Harris described why the case was going before the public.
"The proposal is for a building of 15 storeys, including a basement. The building will contain restaurants, bars, nightclubs, a brothel occupying 1.5 storeys, hotel and offices.
"A resource consent is required because of the construction of the building, the hotel activity, various traffic and parking matters and because the site is noted as containing a scheduled item. Overall, it is a restricted discretionary activity under the plan," she said.
The Chows' planner, Green Group's Martin Green, is arguing strongly for the tower to be allowed because it mostly complies. The only major aspect which is non-complying is the short-stay accommodation, a discretionary activity on that site, therefore up to the council to make a call.
The public hearing will be in the Auckland Town Hall reception lounge on November 12 and 13.