All that's missing now is a site for the team bases. These days, requirements seem to have shrunk with the size of the boats. Competitors travel light, relatively speaking. Team New Zealand, for example, operates out of converted shipping containers, building its machine shop, for instance, inside a container shell. The boat lives under a canvas "tent" with walls, two containers high.
Before the 2013 San Francisco defeat, Waterfront Auckland scoped the area for a site for a race village and homed in on the existing Wynyard Wharf, running down the west side of the Wynyard Point reclamation. Chairman Bob Harvey called it the "perfect site ... an absolute doozy". A concrete structure, with a large gap between the shoreline and the wharf proper, Harvey said this could be covered with planking.
The only other feasible alternative is on land among the tanks on Wynyard Point. Hijacking Queens Wharf or one of the port company's wharves for the duration, or extending Halsey Wharf out into the harbour just isn't going to happen for all sorts of obvious reasons.
The complication with the Tank Farm is that leases on the favoured northern half, occupied by petroleum-based facilities, don't start expiring until 2022. The leases closer to the city have already begun to expire. Goff is exploring the possibility of buying out the existing leases at a cost of possibly $20 million, saying it would be fantastic to get hold of the land earlier to create the planned headland park. Alternatively, gentle pressure could be put on the occupants to show what good citizens they are by sharing their space with the yachties.
Perhaps they could be tempted by the offer of village naming rights. Or the Prime Minister could take his oil industry mates to one side and twist their arms while delivering the good corporate citizen speech.
Of course the safety police - to say nothing of the sailors - might have something to say about racing teams squatting among tanks of highly volatile liquids. In which case, maybe camping among the vegetable oil, would be more suitable.
Alternatively, there's Bob Harvey's "perfect" site astride Wynyard Wharf.
Whichever site is chosen, there's going to be set-up costs - whether it be a temporary coat of tarseal over the on-shore site, or planking on Wynyard Wharf. Aucklanders shouldn't be ashamed to suggest it's time the rest of the country, through the Government, or the commercial enterprises who will profit from the regatta, dig into their pockets as well.