Hands off Tauranga Domain Alliance to keep Tauranga Domain as a green space.

1 August 2023 Town Hall meeting at the Tauranga Racecourse.

Click here to read the meeting powerpoint presentation.

Latest News at www.handsofftaurangadomain.org

  Tauranga Domain Multi Use Arena/Stadium proposed by Priority One and TCC.

“Don’t worry, the ratepayers will always pick up maintenance and operating costs. More increase on your rates.”

Multi Use Arena/Stadium  Basic Outline

Tauranga’s elite have decided that Tauranga needs a multiuse arena (MUA or Stadium) in downtown Tauranga. This would use a large part of Tauranga Domain. The council has now joined the party and Priority One is pushing this concept forward as there is no way to object to the proposal. (The governing commissioners are not responsible to the community). The only reasoning for an MUA in town is that after an event the spectators will all go downtown and spend their money.  With a likely maximum of 20 scheduled events per annum, this will only rarely happen. 

To date,( June 2022)  there has been no community consultation and none appears to be planned until the feasibility studies are completed.  The commissioners have just signed off on the second round of feasibility studies. The community will have to pay for a significant portion of the facility through increased rates, but they are not being asked for their views. 

The contribution from Tauranga residents is likely to come from four sources:

1. Direct funding towards building the stadium 

2. Annual funding of operating costs 

3. Increased charges to attend sporting and cultural events 

4. Reduced funding for other community organisations and projects (as funders prioritise funding this stadium) 

This MUA is being designed for 8000 -12000 people and amazingly no car parking is being provided.  

The other question is WHY does Tauranga need a MUA for reactangular-field sports (rugby, league and soccer), when the Domain is perfectly big enough for almost all rugby, league and soccer matches, and Baypark is available now and has been used before for major rugby games?  Music and cultural events are also planned, but Baypark or other venues (e.g. Bay Oval, which is currently discussing hosting music events) seem better suited, as they can already fit as many people as the Domain will end up and than are located in a better position for late-night transport (i.e. parking or park & ride).     

Tauranga City Council zoning and the future vision for Tauranga has high rise developments on the Te Papa peninsula, with a community of 40,000 people living here.  Tauranga Domain will be the only place where community sports can be played by these people and one of the very few green spaces left in downtown for recreation.  The athletics track is used by many diverse groups, today there were disabled children were using the athletics track. 

Currently Tauranga Domain is home to bowls, croquet, tennis, athletics, cricket, rugby and has the only world class athletics track this side of the Kaimais.  These are all community sports, and all those sports will be removed or impacted by a MUA in Tauranga Domain. 

The Council plan is to move croquet and bowls to somewhere else, leave tennis in the domain (tennis access will be heavily impacted by any major event at the MUA), move the athletics track to Baypark Speedway and kick out the speedway.   The cost of all these movements is not included in any of the cost estimates for the MUA.  A lot of effort for a lightly used MUA with no car parking.

 Other cities have inner city parks and place a high amenity value on them. Think Central Park in New York, an oasis of green.   However here in Tauranga, the plan  will destroy the only green area left in downtown. 

Tauranga Domain must remain a green space and a place of community sports. 

There were over 200 pages of feasibility studies recently presented to the council, mostly reports designed to reinforce the already made decision to build a MUA in Tauranga Domain.  There was no coherent business case presented, just a lot of “pie in the sky” hopeful estimates.   Using the same data, a case can be made to place an MUA near Tauriko or Baypark. 

 That is, if the community of Tauranga wants a MUA. 

The cost is estimated to be around $180 million without the additional cost of all the other code moves.  The number will escalate with time and ratepayers will pay this cost and the annual running cost deficit. 

The MUA appears to be an enormous ratepayer subsidy to downtown businesses, but even that will only benefit the businesses for a few days every year.