Civic precinct: A silver bullet or red herring?

An artist's impression of the proposed civic precinct. Photo: Supplied.

Tauranga's proposed $300 million civic precinct is being touted as a 'once in a generation” opportunity for the community, but some business owners are dubious about its benefits.

Work on the civic precinct Te Manawataki o Te Papa is set to begin later this year, but Tauranga City council will consult with the community on two options as part of the draft annual plan process.

The precinct will be located where the current library and council chambers reside, between Wharf Street and Hamilton Street in central Tauranga.

Option one, which would see the full precinct realised in one stage, has an estimated cost of $303.4 million and includes a library, museum, civic whare (a venue for council and community meetings) and an exhibition space.

It would also include the development of the waterfront reserve, between Hamilton and Wharf Streets, linking the harbour with the civic precinct via Masonic Park.

Option two is a scaled back version that would include a library and community hub and the civic whare, with a cost of $126.8 million.

Barrel Room owner Stewart Gebbie, who has owned the Wharf Street bar and eatery for five years, says the 'plans look great” but he's concerned the area would be used infrequently.

'We need more people in the city before building a huge facility like that,” said Gebbie.

'This on its own, isn't going to bring people into town.”

He's concerned Tauranga doesn't have the population for facilities like this, and it's putting the "cart before the horse".

Central Tauranga has long been plagued with empty shops and dwindling business. In part because of older buildings requiring seismic strengthening and also Tauranga's urban sprawl has seen shopping centres developed in the suburbs.

Fancy That owner Bill Campbell finds the civic precinct "hard to get excited about". Photo: John Borren/SunLive.

Retailer Bill Campbell has owned specialty store Fancy That since 2008 and is demoralised by the state of the CBD.

'I think the city centre is past it past the point of no return,” he says.

'It's just going to take so long for the whole area to recover.

'The CBD needs far more constructive and instantaneous repairs and maintenance before we need the civic precinct,” says Campbell.

Commissioner Stephen Selwood said, "The city has clearly died” in Monday's council meeting about the civic precinct. He was referencing a recent walk through the CBD.

Downtown Tauranga chairman Brian Berry disagrees with the assertion that the 'CBD has died”.

'It's not dying, it's just changing,” he says.

Downtown Tauranga is a not-for-profit organisation that represents Tauranga city centre business members.

'The CBD was going to have to go through this process,” says Berry.

'It can't compete as a retail centre against the suburban shopping centres, so the retail needs to become more specialty.”

Tauranga Chamber of Commerce CEO Matt Cowley agrees with Berry.

'I found it disappointing that Commissioner Selwood has been quoted as saying the ‘city centre has died',” says Cowley.

'The long list of private sector developments that are underway, or are in the pipeline, shows there is confidence in Tauranga CBD.”

Selwood is, however, in full support of the precinct. He says: 'This is our unique opportunity to put Tauranga on the map, not only to wider New Zealand but also to the people of Tauranga."

Short term impacts

Gebbie's biggest fear is the impact construction of the precinct will have on his business in the short term.

'It's going to be years of pain for central city businesses.

'It's going to be awful for anyone within 500 meters of the work site,” says Gebbie.

If option one is chosen by the commissioners, council is proposing it will take six years to complete, but said if it is done in pieces, it could take up to 14 years.

Berry says the construction work is a 'necessary evil”.

'You can't do that size of development without having disruption and it is difficult,” says Berry.

'I'm sure that when it's developed, every attempt will be made to mitigate the disruption.”

The chairman is in full support of the precinct and would like to see the full project completed in one stage because Tauranga had a 'culture of getting things half done”.

'What has been proposed is excellent,” says Berry. 'The big thing is to make the decision and get on with it and do it now because the city needs it.”

'Tauranga is moving away from being a small seaside town, to a regional business and cultural hub.

"The precinct is for the benefit of not only of the CBD, but of the whole community and greater region potentially.”

In terms of funding the large undertaking, half the cost of the civic precinct developments would be debt-funded and financed through rates. The balance would be funded from other sources such as government grants, the sale of non-core council assets and sponsorship.

Commission Chair Anne Tolley is eager for the community to engage in the consultation process.

'We are at a moment in time when we have the chance to do this once and do it properly, so it's important that we hear what the community thinks about the options proposed,” says Tolley.

Community consultation on the civic precinct options will take place from March 25 until April 26.

The commission is expected to make a final decision about the civic precinct on June 27.


8 comments

Hmmm

Posted on 24-02-2022 19:50 | By Let's get real

Forget the empty public spaces such as a museum, Civic Whare, Art gallery and exhibition space and establish a pedestrian precinct first. Let businesses establish the environment that people actually want to visit and then after maybe three to five years of positive ratepayers interaction with the environment, start thinking about establishing the nonsense community features. Not a fan of paying to display bits of old rocks, stone, bones and "Art"...


Sad centre

Posted on 25-02-2022 07:23 | By Kancho

Pretty much stopped going there so development unlikely to make much difference for the foreseeable future. One day it may become a destination again but it won't be for bid building but more about atmosphere. If it becomes waterfront restaurants and more boutique shopping and entertainment . The argument is a bit Monty python this parrot is dead skit. Return Tauranga centre to a village and do what cities do elsewhere move the other stuff out of the congested peninsula. Won't be in my lifetime as I doubt businesses can hold on that long.


Fernhill22

Posted on 25-02-2022 08:39 | By Yadick

I hope you don't mind me commenting on this Fernhill22. Fernhill22 made an absolute brilliant suggestion for our city in the comments section of this article on 22nd February. It would see energy, vibrancy and life brought back to our city and would stand the test of time. If you're going to bleed money into it, and you are going to have to, then get it right the first time. It'll never be cheaper to do than now. Thank you Fernhill22, your comment really inspired me.


precint

Posted on 25-02-2022 08:41 | By dumbkof2

back door way of getting an unwanted museum


Vision

Posted on 25-02-2022 11:36 | By Fernhill22

Rather than spending the money on things nobody really wants or needs (Library, Civic Whare) which will not entice people back into the city or provide a good return on investment. TCC should be looking to revitalise the Waterfront to become a focal point for people to come down town to enjoy. Look at the waterfront in Queenstown as an example or even Auckland, great restaurants, shopping & activities for people to enjoy. Build piers off the waterfront to encompass these opportunities, start operating a ferry service or utilising the rail network to bring people into the city. We want a vibrant place, taking advantage of the outstanding waterfront we have here in Tauranga. Obtain private investment along with tax payer funding to create a lasting legacy. We can’t just live off the Mt beach being our main attraction, create new jobs & revenue back into the local economy.


Nah I can't see it

Posted on 25-02-2022 12:19 | By earlybird

regenerating the CBD. It'll just end up being an empty waste of money. Surely someone can come up with a better, more exciting idea.


Not needed and we have already said that

Posted on 25-02-2022 13:12 | By an_alias

We do not need the $300M added to our rates bills. Its already crazy high. This has been rejected so many times but democracy has no place in NZ apparently


Overit

Posted on 25-02-2022 13:13 | By overit

That figure will blow out!!


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