The Prime Minister says public money might be put into a convention centre at SkyCity to ensure it is not an "eyesore". Opposition leader Andrew Little wonders how bad a $402 million eyesore could be. That is the sum the casino agreed 18 months ago to spend on a convention
Editorial: $402 million enough to buy us the centre we need
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The published artist's impression shows a functional block design incorporating the facades of a couple of existing buildings. If this is contributing to the higher cost, the problem is easily fixed. Facades are phony heritage protection. They are dead shells clinging to modern structures that overwhelm them.
If the problem is more serious, if SkyCity has found a 3000-seat convention centre to be uneconomic without a public contribution of capital or running costs, then the Government should change the specification rather than put in public money. Let SkyCity build to whatever scale it believes it can operate profitably. That will be the most economic proposal for Auckland and the country.
Let other cities subsidise international convention centres if they wish, an economy of our size needs to be more careful. Public investment in projects that cannot pay off is not just a waste of public money, it entices scarce private capital into poor investments. An eyesore is the least of our worries.