Taylor Swift鈥檚 Australian leg of her Eras Tour听is hours from kicking off, and while many Kiwis will head over to one (or multiple) of her seven shows, questions remain as to why she isn鈥檛 coming to New Zealand. Eden Park鈥檚 CEO Nick Sautner has (some) of the answers.听
Swiftie hearts all around New Zealand weren鈥檛 ready for it last June when it was announced听Taylor Swift was leaving Aotearoa off her Eras Tour schedule.听
At the time, the snub was rumoured to be because the country didn鈥檛 have a big enough venue to host her nearly 90-metre-long stage, other theories claimed she wouldn鈥檛 have been able to sell enough tickets to cover the cost of bringing her extravagant tour here.听
Now, with hours before her first Melbourne show kicks off, The Eden Park Trust鈥檚 chief executive officer Nick Sautner speaks to the听Herald, weighing in on the matter and debunking any theories that it was an issue of space or financial viability, 鈥淓den Park has proven it can accommodate any stage or production and 60,000 fans鈥 he notes, adding he has no doubt the venue would have 鈥渟old out multiple shows鈥.听
So, what does the CEO believe the reason is behind the decision for Eden Park not to host the star? Sautner claims it ultimately came down to resource consent.听
鈥淚n 2020, our resource consent permitted Eden Park to hold up to six concerts in any 12-month period,鈥 Sautner says.听
He explains that the limit itself isn鈥檛 exactly an issue, but rather they are finding that promoters are more often than not requiring multiple concert dates to accommodate demand.听
鈥淥ur current consent doesn鈥檛 make this possible, which means artists are bypassing New Zealand and fans are missing out,鈥 he says.听
Nick Sautner, chief executive officer of The Eden Park Trust.听
With听Pink鈥檚 two shows听on March 8 and March 9 and听Coldplay鈥檚 three shows听on November 13, 15 and 16, it leaves Eden Park with only one concert slot this year. Considering the Grammy winner is playing seven shows across two Australian venues this February, Sautner says: 鈥淐learly, this wasn鈥檛 sufficient to host Taylor Swift.鈥澨 听
As well as Australian venues catering for larger crowds - an estimated 75,000 Swifties per Sydney show and 86,000 fans per Melbourne show, Sydney鈥檚 Football Stadium鈥檚 concert quota was recently increased to more than double Eden Park鈥檚, allowing 20 concerts per year. It鈥檚 a business model that proves difficult for challenging for Kiwi venues to compete with, Sautner says.听
鈥淚f a hotel could only operate once a fortnight it would be incredibly challenging to deliver a business model that is commercially viable. This is our current reality at Eden Park, with restrictions imposed that don鈥檛 enable us to operate to industry expectations.鈥听
Taylor Swift's Eras Tour stage is estimated to be 75 metres long, with an additional 10 metres backstage. Photo / Getty Images听
The venue also needs to consider the duration of concerts in any conversations - as the parameters of Eden Park鈥檚 resource consent means shows need a scheduled finishing time of 10.30pm, something that may have been too difficult for Swift to commit to.听
For example, the star鈥檚 Melbourne shows kicks off at 6.30pm with Sabrina Carpenter as the support act. Carpenter鈥檚 set is estimated to go for 45 minutes, meaning if Swift begins her three-and-a-half hour show at 8pm, the earliest she would finish is 11.30pm, already one hour too late for Eden Park.听
Despite there being no Taylor for Eden Park, Sautner says the venue is excited for the year ahead. As well as being New Zealand鈥檚 premier concert venue, hosting globally renowned artists including SIX60, Billy Joel, Guns N鈥 Roses and Ed Sheeran over the years, they have some great events for Kiwis to enjoy in 2024 including Pink and Coldplay.听
For sports fans, Sautner says: 鈥淭he All Blacks will be taking on rivals England in July and Argentina in August and the Black Caps will play Australia in two T20 International cricket matches later this month. We also have Blues rugby, A-League football, NZ domestic cricket and community events that people can look forward to experiencing at New Zealand鈥檚 national stadium.鈥听
As for Kiwi fans heading over to Swift鈥檚 concerts in Australia - and those who aren鈥檛, the听Herald听will be on the ground on opening night in Melbourne, with a first-take review from the first show and following along for the hype.听
Show schedule听
February 16, 17 and 18 - Melbourne Cricket Ground听
February 23, 24, 25 and 26 - Sydney Accor Stadium听
Lillie Rohan is an Auckland-based reporter covering lifestyle and entertainment stories who joined the Herald in 2020. She specialises in all things relationships and dating, great Taylor Swift ticket wars and TV shows you simply cannot miss out on.听
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