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Assembling urban mega-events: The life cycle of the 36th America’s Cup in Auckland

  • Kaifeng Zhao
  • , Kevin Lo*
  • , Laurence Murphy
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Abstract

Urban mega-event research has been largely shaped by studies of premier spectacles, such as the Olympic Games and the FIFA World Cup, where governance is commonly interpreted through urban entrepreneurialism, elite coalitions, and state-of-exception arguments. These frameworks are less suited to second-tier events, whose institutional arrangements are more negotiated, commercially embedded, and contingent. Therefore, this paper uses assemblage thinking and qualitative document analysis (official agreements, planning documents, post-event reports, and media coverage) to examine the 36th America’s Cup (AC36) in Auckland. It traces the event across three stages—forging, stabilising, and de/re-territorialising—to underscore how AC36 was not the outcome of a coherent masterplan, but a provisional socio-material achievement. Its temporary coherence depended on the alignment of legal protocols, alliance contracts, waterfront redevelopment, commercial sponsorship, and a Mana Whenua partnership, as well as on continuous relational labour among public agencies and organisers. Non-human forces were also constitutive: the event Protocol, the AC75 boats, and COVID-19 actively shaped the trajectory of the event. COVID-19, in particular, reconfigured AC36 from a waterfront-based urban spectacle into a broadcast-centred event. While this re-territorialisation enabled the competition to proceed during a pandemic and increase its global visibility, it weakened local economic incentives. As a result, the Auckland hosting coalition fell apart and the next race moved to a new city. This processual and relational account of mega-event urbanism foregrounds how second-tier events are continuously assembled, stabilised, and unmade.
Original languageEnglish
Article number104650
Number of pages12
JournalGeoforum
Volume173
Early online date6 Apr 2026
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 6 Apr 2026

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities
    SDG 11 Sustainable Cities and Communities

User-Defined Keywords

  • Assemblage thinking
  • Auckland
  • Second-tier mega-events
  • Urban governance

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