A vision for downtown Tauranga, similar to one he'd spent his last year of university losing sleep over, was the last thing Jordan Hansen expected to find on his way to buy a pair of shoes earlier this month.
Passing a Tauranga City Council stand at Tauranga Crossing Mall, the budding architect did a double take when he walked past the designs on display.
'When I saw those designs, I was drawn to them because they had aspects of my thesis in them,” he says.
'The social thoroughfare that links the waterfront to the library, the social and cultural spaces. I saw lots of similarities between my thesis design and the council's proposed design for the city centre.”
Growing up in Tauranga, Jordan was always fascinated with buildings, so it came as no surprise to those who knew him when he moved to Auckland in 2016 to complete a Masters of Architecture degree at Unitec Institute of Technology.
In his final year of living on two minute noodles and instant coffee, he chose a thesis topic that was close to his heart.
'Living in Auckland made me realise what was lacking in the Tauranga City centre in terms of community, social and cultural spaces,” he says.
'I love Tauranga, but I could see how it was struggling with the growing pains of becoming a city without enough investment to create a central city identity.”
Completed in 2020, Jordan's final design, and 140-page doorstop of a thesis, has many similarities to the refreshed Tauranga Civic Precinct Masterplan: Te Manawataki o Te Papa – the heartbeat of Te Papa – which was developed by Willis Bond in collaboration with Council and mana whenua representatives, and adopted by the Commission late last year.
At its core is a library and community hub designed to re-energise the city centre and bring the community back together.
'I was really excited when I saw the council's plans. They are so much bigger than what I had done, and they look amazing, but the central idea is the same, which is to develop a space that encourages people and private investment back into the city,” Jordan says.
Topping his class with an A with second class honours and distinction, Jordan is now back in Tauranga working as a graduate architect for local firm Architectural Design Group (ADG).
He couldn't be more excited to see the Council proposing to invest more in the future of his home city.
'I had to move to Auckland because at the time I couldn't study architecture here, but I always wanted to come back to Tauranga and I look forward to seeing this all get underway.”
Tauranga Crossing Mall is one of many places Tauranga City Council Commissioners have visited over the past few weeks to chat with the community about Council's plans for the city centre and other proposed changes to the 2021-31 Long-term Plan, together with the draft 2022/23 Annual plan.
These include looking at new ways of funding much-needed infrastructure for growth, and making rates fairer for everyone.
Commission Chair Anne Tolley says as well as attending markets and organised events, the commissioners held two online sessions to make it as easy as possible for everyone to participate in the discussion.
'We've had some amazing feedback for and against our proposals and some really robust conversations, which is what this is all about.
'It's been a fantastic few weeks and meeting Jordan and reading his thesis, which is really impressive, has been the icing on the cake for me.
'Tauranga is full of talented and creative people and it's a huge privilege to be able to work alongside the community to help this great city realise its true potential.”
To find out more and share your feedback go to www.tauranga.govt.nz/itstime
Feedback closes at 5pm on Tuesday, April 26.
6 comments
Hong Kong here we come.
Posted on 23-04-2022 11:29 | By Cynical Me
OH dear, same thinking taught by the same people to create a world all the same. nothing inspiring about that. nothing surprising either about the copy me style of learning. where's the imagination, that is if we really need to waste ratepayers money on a vanity project.
Ann Tolley read his thesis?
Posted on 24-04-2022 12:55 | By morepork
(Which was described as a "large doorstop")...Maybe she shared it with Mahuta... I'm sure Jordan has done a great job on his thesis and I hope he gets a chance to implement at least some of his vision...WHEN WE CAN AFFORD IT. Maybe we need some bright young minds working in finance and Admin who can help to bring these things to life. Maybe even some people who understand the word "priority" and don't mind getting the community to vote on its priorities.
Library
Posted on 24-04-2022 14:02 | By Slim Shady
I keep hearing about the library being at the core. Who knew that a library was so vital to transforming a city? It’s just a library, and given that 25% of kiwis are illiterate I don’t think it’s a game changer.
@Slim Shady
Posted on 25-04-2022 12:37 | By morepork
I love libraries, but I grew up with them and joined when I was 6. However, I think you make a very good point. The role of the library in today's society has changed and it isn't just about knowledge, reading, and language. With the level of illiteracy we have, libraries couldn't survive if it was only about reading. The library is an activity centre for young people, and of course, they carry media as well as books. I agree with you that a library won't transform a city, but I think it is a very useful adjunct to a city. A modern library does far more than its predecessor 60 years ago...
What, a library, who would have thought!
Posted on 27-04-2022 19:49 | By Get our roads
Dont believe a young modernist architecture student has the same stupid vision as the commissioners, let me tell you, all people of Tauranga want is to be able to drive from A to B without major traffic congestion, a stupid library ain't gonna get me to downtown Tauranga. Might get the retired who have nothing to do all day but drive around a dead end city, you blokes are about 15 years too late, just like the town planners and resource management managers and roading managers, you will continue catching up with roading, housing and costs, but hey, you'll get a flash new library for the homeless to read their books in, good luck with that. Never going to town again, what a hole and will always remain one. Should get infrastructure sorted first, that's a Council priority is it not you clever people with degrees.
A question for Get Our Roads.
Posted on 29-04-2022 09:46 | By morepork
If you had been given a chance to vote on the priority for major expenditure projects, (like a library and roads etc.) would you have done so? No form filling or 6th degree, just easy online access using your email and ticking a box to say you are resident in Tauranga... You get a list of say, 6 major projects which you put a number by to indicate how important they are to you. You could put roads at the top and a library at the bottom. The results would be binding on TCC for development. Would you do it?
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