CCSV Connectors

This data comprises a diagram expressing the spatial vision. The diagram is indicative only and may not be used for analysis. Each goal can be represented spatially and, as a whole, provides an organising structure for the elements that will lead towards the Vision.Connectors join places and people and offer those of all ages, stages and levels of mobility with a choice of how they move around the Central City. This ranges from pathways, lanes and shared streets connecting people and places through to rapid transit corridors offering connections between home and work and future development opportunities.The connectors of the spatial vision are comprised of three different areas:-Key public transport connectors/Regional connectors. Mass transit extends through the city generating increased movement capacity and city streets that support increased density of living and commercial space.-Green ribbons. Green ribbons extend from hills to the harbour - they follow streets, go between new development blocks, through parks and generally follow contours and old stream locations. They allow movement and stormwater management and increase biodiversity.Read about the Central City Spatial Vision here: https://planningforgrowth.wellington.govt.nz/__data/assets/pdf_file/0016/13507/Central-City-Spatial-Vision-final-2020.pdfFor more information contact the Planning for Growth team: planningforgrowth@wcc.govt.nz

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Value
Theme ["geospatial"]
Author Wellington City Council
Maintainer WellingtonCityCouncil
Maintainer Email WellingtonCityCouncil
Source https://data-wcc.opendata.arcgis.com/maps/WCC::ccsv-connectors
Source Created 2021-09-30T02:03:04.000Z
Source Modified 2021-09-30T02:05:27.000Z
Language English
Spatial { "type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [ [ [174.7686, -41.3158], [174.7978, -41.3158], [174.7978, -41.2623], [174.7686, -41.2623], [174.7686, -41.3158] ] ] }
Source Identifier https://data-wcc.opendata.arcgis.com/maps/WCC::ccsv-connectors
Dataset metadata created 17 April 2022, last updated 10 August 2022