Housing canned as option for Tauranga Racecourse

The community will be asked for feedback on three options for the Greerton Racecourse Reserve. Photo: John Borren/SunLive.

The possibility of using the Tauranga Racecourse land for housing has been taken off the table, with Tauranga City Council commissioners removing it as an option for future use of the site.

At a meeting on Monday, the commissioners chose three options, from 10, to put out for public consultation and removed residential housing options from further consideration.

The 85 hectare Greerton Racecourse Reserve is currently occupied by Racing Tauranga, Tauranga Equestrian Sports Association and the Tauranga Golf Club.

Racing Tauranga and Tauranga Golf Club's leases on the crown reserve land expire in 2039.

The council's investigation into the best future use of the land is called the Greerton Maarawaewae Study.

Its purpose is to identify opportunities that support wellbeing and liveability as Tauranga grows, as well as providing certainty to the current users.

Housing was one of the options touted for the site but it was met with disapproval from current users and mana whenua, who want the land to retain its reserve status.

Mana whenua, Ngāi Tamarāwaho hapū representatives lodged a claim via the Treaty of Waitangi Act in February.

Hapū representative Buddy Mikaere previously told Local Democracy Reporting if the status were to change to enable housing for example, that would trigger the claim.

The land was confiscated after the Battle of Gate Pa in 1865 and because the land was being used for public good the hapū didn't pursue it as part of their treaty settlement, said Mikaere.

After the meeting, he said he was 'very pleased to see housing off the table”.

The nine month long Greerton Maarawaewae Study included two rounds of public consultation, with this feedback included when weighting the options.

During the meeting council urban communities programme director Carl Lucca says there was 'very limited support within the community” for any of the housing options.

Lucca says the site is strategically located on the Te Papa peninsula corridor, close to the heart of the city.

'The central corridor is expected to see some of the most significant transformation in the sub region over the next 30 years, with a higher frequency public transport system and higher densities along the corridor, especially in areas around the hospital,” he says.

Commissioner Shadrach Rolleston says he 'liked” the recommendation to remove housing because having housing identified in planning documents 'created some uncertainty particularly for current users”.

In September 2020 the land was included in the Te Papa Spatial Plan.

One of the motions the commissioners voted for was to remove reference to ‘comprehensively developed housing' as it relates to the Greerton Racecourse Reserve from the Te Papa Spatial Plan and other relevant strategic documents.

Tauranga City Council commission chair Anne Tolley. Photo: John Borren/SunLive.

Commission chair Anne Tolley says the only certainty in the recommendations was that housing was removed from those planning documents.

She says the documents had 'created significant uncertainty without a mechanism to resolve that uncertainty” for current users.

'I think a lot of people will breathe a sigh of relief,” says Tolley. 'It doesn't do much to alleviate our housing shortage.”

'It's important to remember that this is really long term planning, that we have people in place with leases that are out 2039,” she says.

Tolley says it was 'like a jigsaw puzzle” because council was asking the community what they see the land being used for as well as how Racing New Zealand see future use of the site and Health New Zealand, alongside mana whenua.

'We are trying to put all of that together and give some certainty to the poor old current users, who are in the middle of all of that,” she says.

The three options council will put out for consultation are: option one health services and a central park with a community centre and active recreation that would revert to the central park if Health New Zealand decided it did not want the site. This is council's preferred option.

Option two is a central park with active reaction and a community centre; and option three is enhanced status quo adding active recreation and possibly a community centre to the site.

Option one and two would require the racecourse and equestrian to be relocated while enhanced status quo would mean all current users can remain.

Bay of Plenty District Health Board CEO Pete Chandler says the DHB Board had been working closely with the Health NZ Infrastructure Unit on campus planning over the last year.

'Our business case for a new clinical services building contains a number of essential components including strategising proposed future models of care, options appraisals, and financials; and we are currently working through the clinical services plan component,” he says.

Chandler says the business case would also consider a greenfield build option if suitable land is available.

Lucca says the initial ten options were evaluated using multi criteria assessment that gave different weightings to the strategic needs of the city as well as the public feedback.

Consultants placed 20 per cent weight on future health needs, 25 to 30 per cent to housing, 25 to 30 per cent on green space and active recreation, 10 per cent to existing stakeholders and 15 to 20 per cent to cost.

Using the criteria, the top option weighted both with and without costs was health services and recreation.

Lucca says the three shortlisted options were chose from community feedback.

Tolley says they had 'pivoted slightly” at the last meeting in April and decided to go out for formal consultation again on a narrower set of options.

Consultation proposed from mid-July to mid-August with public hearings in October.

Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air

6 comments

Bravo

Posted on 13-06-2022 17:24 | By Kancho

At last a decision from the commissioners that makes sense. The lease is still 2039 on its current users but either way certainly planning around the road infrastructure needs to be high on the agenda. Pinch points of traffic flow in Greerton and Barkes Corner need work as spending over twenty minutes plus from Mitre 10 to Barkes corner.


Housing

Posted on 13-06-2022 18:23 | By Let's get real

I really believe that council has missed out on making a real difference for not just local residents and businesses, but also for the national need for appropriate housing. Go to Greerton Park or just about any other public domain around the city and see for yourself the conditions that some people are choosing to live in. But using millions of litres of water during a drought to keep the grass green is far more important for those selfish or plain uncaring people in our communities. Enjoy your leisure


We all knew that!

Posted on 13-06-2022 19:28 | By Cynical Me

Well, what a great waste of time and energy at the behest of property developers. More activities was always the way and the Health system can get lost and build on the land they already own or can purchase elsewhere. Sure we need to sort a bit of room at Barkes cnr and the sooner the better, but no doubt that's an NZTA's 30-year plan. We don't need housing in Town we need housing where people work i.e. kiwifruit country. surely that's obvious, isn't it? CBD's everywhere are shutting down. Unliveable spaces. Overseas malls are being converted for schools and living spaces. Shops online. The solution to our housing lies in low-cost subdivisions down south of Te Puke and north towards katikati. That would mean the county actually doing something, after all, they collect the rates from the land where the labour is used.


Kancho

Posted on 14-06-2022 09:07 | By Slim Shady

Give over. The Commissioners wanted crammed in housing on it. They have been blocked by Buddy & co. And I, for one, are thankful. But don't give the credit to Tolley.


park

Posted on 14-06-2022 11:06 | By dumbkof2

great now they just need to drop all those other stupid ideas for around the place


How hard is it?

Posted on 14-06-2022 12:03 | By morepork

Replace a green space with housing or any other buildings? When we don't HAVE to? Option 3, the obviously best one, WON'T get implemented because the Commissioners don't want it. Thanks to Buddy and the Hapu, the REALLY stupid options have been temporarily thwarted. The voice of you and me is unheard by the Commissioners; but a possible Maori claim gets their attention. I emailed my objections to the 5th Avenue cul-de-sac this morning, but I know it is a waste of time. Queen Anne and her courtiers have already decided what will happen with Cameron Road, and future generations will have to undo it. Tauranga has been "home" for me since 1958, but if Labour wins this by-election I'll have to look at leaving. I find the arbitrary decisions of an unelected elite, and the cynical surreptitious replacement of Democracy with tribal tikanga, to be increasingly unbearable.


Leave a Comment


You must be logged in to make a comment.