Robertson visits fitness centre trust
Economic gains for region to come from large sporting events, minister told
Hawke’s Bay’s future as a host of national and international multisports was outlined last week to the Minister for Sport and Recreation, Grant Robertson.
The minister visited the Hawke’s Bay Community Fitness Centre Trust (HBCFC Trust) facilities at Mitre 10 Regional Sports Park, where he met a number of New Zealand’s top athletes training there as part of an Athletics NZ performance camp.
The HBCFC Trust is working on not one but three capital projects that will combine to help create a significant income earner for the region.
The largest of the three projects is a $32 million Hawke’s Bay Regional Aquatic Centre, which will link into the current Eastern Institute of Technology (EIT) Institute of Sport and Health facilities and will open in early to mid-2022.
About 166 full-time equivalent jobs are expected to be directly generated through this project.
The other two projects are a $3m extension of the current sports hall and a new $5m accommodation hostel next to the current institute.
“Together, these multi-sports facilities will make Mitre 10 Park unrivalled in New Zealand as a worldclass sports training, competition and major events venue,” says Sir Graeme Avery, the chairman of the HBCFC Trust.
Regional, national and possibly international sports events could be held at the park and across the region, bringing in a significant number of athletes and supporters, with the visitor spend materially helping the post-Covid economic recovery of the hospitality and retail sectors in Hawke’s Bay, he says.
However, it wasn’t just the economic benefit that should be counted, says Sir Graeme.
There was huge community aspirational benefit also.
“The opportunity for local athletes, particularly young people, to participate in major events here in their own region, with wha¯ nau and their community watching and supporting them, is a huge part of why the Trust was formed,” he says.
“Not to mention the buzz for all users of the trust’s facilities, from school children to our community gym members, working out alongside and rubbing shoulders with national and international athletes.
“[It] is very motivational.”
The Aquatic Centre will boast an International Swimming Federation (Fina) global elite standard pool that will add to other world-class sporting facilities at the regional sports park.
In particular, the existing International Hockey Federation (FIH) Level 1 hockey turf, the World International Athletics Federation (IAAF) Level 2 athletics facilities, and the multi-court canoe polo facility.
The trust has been working hard to gain funding for the three capital projects with contributions coming from the Lotteries Significant Grants Fund, the Provincial Growth Fund, and the Infrastructure Reference Group’s (IRG) shovel-ready funding.
The Hawke’s Bay community has also contributed $19m, including $4m from the Hastings District Council.
“We’re already a favoured training venue for our national elite athletes and our longer-term goal is for Hawke’s Bay to become an internationally recognised sporting event region,” says Sir Graeme.
Together, these multisports facilities will make Mitre 10 Park unrivalled in New Zealand. Sir Graeme Avery chairman, HBCFC Trust