Image: Tina Tiller
Image: Tina Tiller

SocietyApril 15, 2025

We go inside Ōtautahi’s new $683 million stadium

Image: Tina Tiller
Image: Tina Tiller

Alex Casey dons a hard hat and high vis to snoop around the biggest and most controversial new building in Ōtautahi. 

I know I’m not the only one who feels absurdly moved by the spectacle of One NZ stadium at Te Kaha. Drive anywhere in the Christchurch CBD and you’ll see its white skeleton peeking around every corner. Head up the Port Hills and it’s plonked on the flat landscape like a giant roomba. Walk directly under it and be humbled by the scale, the optimism, the strength and resilience and all those other sappy buzzwords that I’m sure locals are really sick of hearing by now. 

Replacing the quake-damaged Lancaster Park, the $683 million stadium has been under construction in central Christchurch for the last three years. Boasting a fully covered roof, 32 food and drink vendors and a maximum capacity of 37,300, the stadium is a monumental part of the city’s revitalisation. It is also not without controversy, with a budget increase of $150 million and a litany of locals decrying the “ridiculous” CBD location on every social media post. 

Yesterday, media were invited inside the stadium to mark one year out from opening day. Donning high vis and hard hats (“no high heels” we were told in our safety briefing), we were ushered past pie-eating tradies and 500ml cans of V, through the Rainbows End turnstiles and onto a construction site that would make Peter Wolfkamp proud. It was crunch time on The Block NZ, and there were stacks of Gib and giant K’Nex pieces as far as the eye could see. 

We walked up a flight of stairs and stood in the concourse area where construction director Brian Hayes gave us an update over a cacophony of sawing metal, trucks beeping in reverse and nearby sirens. The roof construction is set to be finished in the next few weeks, as is the cladding around the entire building to make the whole structure watertight. The turf is currently being grown offsite near the airport, and landscaping will also start in the next few weeks. 

A view from the south end of the stadium. (Photo: Alex Casey)

It sounds like thirsty work, soon acknowledged by mayor Phil Mauger who pretended to order a glass of pinot from a nearby empty bar. Speaking of drinks, one of the unique features of the stadium is that the concourse provides unobstructed sightlines to the field of play, even from Phil Mauger’s pinot stand. “It’s a real drawcard because in a lot of places you will be busting for the toilet but you don’t want to miss the action,” project director Kent Summerfield later tells me. 

We move to another spot to see the players’ tunnel and the 23 corporate boxes. Staring out across the enormous dirt floor, Mauger will not be drawn on his dream musical act. “Whatever it is or whoever it is, it will be good for the city because we haven’t had any of it for the last 13 years.” Sport will be “in the mix”, but there’s plenty of room for everyone. “I’ve heard about E-sports bringing in 20,000 people for a week – that’s every bit as good for the city as rugby.” 

While he won’t get into specific artists, Mauger says concerts will form a huge part of the stadium’s function, also helped by the covered roof and a giant curtain that can be drawn across the 22 metre line for a more intimate set-up. “Up north, Adele sang in the pissing rain,” he says, peering up the nearly-finished clear plastic ceiling. “We won’t have that problem here.” 

A view of the roof from the maintenance entrance. (Photo: Alex Casey)

One NZ stadium can host up to 15 concerts “at a louder level” every year, Summerfield soon tells me. “Of those, six can be at the higher thresholds – your Metallicas, your ACDCs – and nine at a medium-high threshold. Below that, we can have as many events as we like.” There will be 25,000 permanent seats with an extra 5000 that can be added, and standing room on the field taking the maximum capacity of the stadium to 37,300 people. 

But given that it’s going to cost the Christchurch ratepayer $144 dollars for the first two years, decreasing over an estimated three decades, can locals expect a freebie ticket anytime soon? “That’s up to Venues Ōtautahi, and I’m sure they will be thinking about how to make Christchurch people as happy as possible,” says Mauger. “First of all, we have to see if it generates money. If it breaks even, I’m happy. If it generates money, I’m more than happy.”

One NZ Stadium in the middle of the CBD. (Photo: Supplied)

There’s also the question of transport. Given the CBD’s stop-starty grid layout and complicated one-way system, it’s hard not to shake visions of 30,000 furious Cantabrians honking all the way from Moorhouse Ave to Ashburton. “Like with Sail GP, I just want one free bus after another coming in and dropping people off from everywhere,” says Mauger. “People can also walk from the Terrace and catch the tram down, so it’s just going to make the whole city electric.” 

And where are drivers going to park? “I have no idea,” says Mauger. “There are carparks down the road, but what we really want is that contingent of free buses coming in from, say, Hornby or the Palms.” Mauger recently attended the Formula One in Melbourne, and says he was taking notes. “Man, do they know how to move people – we’ve got to follow what they are doing and learn from them.” He failed to mention Melbourne’s comprehensive tram and train network. 

The concourse, soon to be filled with food and drink vendors. (Photo: Alex Casey)

The mayor was soon rushed away to his next engagement and the media was left milling about, shooting B-roll and picking up last minute questions. I stood as close to the stands as I could get and watched as a suspended white steel beam spun slowly from a crane in the middle of the stadium. Through a gap in the north stand, the cardboard cathedral stood tall. I blinked back a pinprick of tears and vowed not to get too sappy about strength and resilience etc.

Thankfully, the poignant moment was immediately disrupted by the giant arm of lime green forklift, which appeared to be headed straight for us. “I’ve got to unload right where you fellas are standing,” a bemused tradie yelled from the ground. 

With that, we exited through the gift shop / past the huge empty merchandise stand. Pausing at the maintenance entrance to look up at the giant roof one more time, a nearby piece of tape told a compelling one-sentence tale: “this door frame got ran over on level 1”. Strength! Resilience! Don’t get sappy! I handed in my hardhat and high vis and walked to my car past a prophetic mural that got the pinpricks going again: “something beautiful is bound to happen.” 

This time next year, I guess we will know for sure. 

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A collage features hiking boots with an ice cream cone in one boot and yarn with knitting needles in the other. The background has financial charts. Text reads "THE COST OF BEING" on the right.
Image: The Spinoff

SocietyApril 15, 2025

The cost of being: A retiree for whom ‘living lightly is a lifestyle choice’

A collage features hiking boots with an ice cream cone in one boot and yarn with knitting needles in the other. The background has financial charts. Text reads "THE COST OF BEING" on the right.
Image: The Spinoff

As part of our series exploring how New Zealanders live and our relationship with money, a 67-year-old retiree explains her approach to spending and saving.

Want to be part of The Cost of Being? Fill out the questionnaire here.

Gender: Female.

Age: 67.

Ethnicity: Pākehā.

Role: Retired/volunteer.

Salary/income/assets: Living on the pension. Own few assets – just enough to put me over the limit to be able to get an accommodation supplement.

My living location is: Small town.

Rent/mortgage per week: Currently pay $285 to rent a bach. It’s not ideal, but it is good value. It is now up for sale, and I will not get anything as good for under $400.

Student loan or other debt payments per week: I earned so little in years leading up to turning 65 that I didn’t reach the repayment threshold and so was a bit shocked on getting the pension that I would now have to pay back $17 a week.

Typical weekly food costs

Groceries: $50-$80. Just me, and I no longer have a pet because it’s too expensive. I make almost everything from scratch and batch cook, but I do like to eat a healthy and varied diet.

Eating out: Averages $20. Lunch in town about once a fortnight.

Takeaways: $5. Can’t resist an ice cream.

Workday lunches: None.

Cafe coffees/snacks: $10 average. Sometimes you just have to have a cuppa but I avoid buying tea when out because it’s rarely good, and if I meet someone at a cafe I’d rather have a muffin or cake instead.

Savings: While my rent is relatively low I am able to save about a $100 most weeks.

I worry about money: Sometimes.

Three words to describe my financial situation: Disciplined. Adequate (for now). Precarious (the future).

My biggest edible indulgence would be: Darjeeling tea.

In a typical week my alcohol expenditure would be: $0. I gave up smoking and drinking decades ago, and I now live on the amount I would have spent on those alone which is kind of mind-boggling!

In a typical week my transport expenditure would be: $2. I use my Gold Card on the bus to town, and only occasionally need to get a bus in peak times. I walk and cycle locally.

I estimate in the past year the ballpark amount I spent on my personal clothing (including sleepwear and underwear) was: Maybe $100? Everything but undies and shoes come from op shops, and hand-me-downs from friends who put on weight.

My most expensive clothing in the past year was: $70. Wool to knit a jersey, but I think of it as more of a hobby/entertainment cost.

My last pair of shoes cost: $165 for tramping boots that I wear as my everyday footwear. I have small feet and finding adequate footwear is very difficult. I had recently found some that were very good and when I saw them in a 50% off sale I bought another pair. They are still in storage for when I finally wear out the original pair.

My grooming/beauty expenditure in a year is about: Less than $100. Cut my own hair. Shampoo, basic moisturiser.

My exercise expenditure in a year is about: None. I walk and garden for exercise.

My last Friday night cost: Nothing. I loathe going out at night.

Most regrettable purchase in the last 12 months was: I can’t afford to make regrettable purchases so I think hard and research before buying anything I have to.

Most indulgent purchase (that I don’t regret) in the last 12 months was: I bought a really good scythe.

One area where I’m a bit of a tightwad is: I don’t think of myself as a tightwad. Living lightly is a lifestyle choice.

Five words to describe my financial personality would be: Careful, ethical, ingenious, frugal, unusual.

I grew up in a house where money was: Money had been tighter with four older siblings but by the time I came along my father had a good job and my siblings were leaving home so I had it better than they had. But my father never shook having been poor when young and seemed to me to at the time to be stingy. I think they might’ve over-extended themselves to buy into an upmarket suburb and I felt we were poorer in comparison to others at school, when in fact we were comparatively well off.

The last time my Eftpos card was declined was: 2007, and it was the bank’s fault.

In five years, in financial terms, I see myself: With the current political direction, I see myself a lot worse off than I am now.

Describe your financial low: Being unemployed in the early 90s when the benefits were cut and rent for the most basic flat on my own was 80% of my income.

I would love to have more money for: To support causes I feel strongly about. I’d buy myself a tiny house if I could.

I give money away to: Small amounts to climate and social justice orgs. Generally, I offer time volunteering in lieu of financial donations. I sub a struggling friend when I can.

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