The New Zealand Herald

Hastings food hub a ‘fresh opportunit­y’

- Paul Charman

Alarge site beside Heinz Wattie’s production plant in Hastings could become the new home to food production and developmen­t in Hawke’s Bay.

The 16.5ha Tomoana Food Hub in Hanui Rd, Hastings, is offering design, build and lease options to foodrelate­d businesses of any size.

Daniel Moffit and Jake Smith of Bayleys Havelock North office have been appointed sole leasing agents for the hub.

“Up to 9.7 ha of land is now available for the developmen­t of modern food grade premises for the processing and manufactur­ing of food and beverage products on attractive, flexible lease terms,” says Moffit, Bayleys’ Havelock North and Hastings branch manager.

“Businesses servicing the food and beverage sector, such as storage, packaging, distributi­on or transport companies, as well as research facilities, can also be accommodat­ed.”

Tomoana Food Hub is being developed by a long-establishe­d Hawke’s Bay business, owned by the Taylor family, which also operates Tomoana Warehousin­g and Transport.

Developmen­t manager Logan Taylor says the hub can host any business operating within the food industry, from processing and packaging to product developmen­t.

“We are developing much more than an industrial business park,” he says. “We are creating a collaborat­ive workspace for food and beverage businesses to cluster and share knowledge, by-products, energy, logistics and infrastruc­ture, resulting in increased productivi­ty and profitabil­ity.

“Our specific zoning only allows businesses in the food value chain, which means neighbours are always going to be other complement­ary food businesses — there’ll be no heavy industrial activity, which is important from a food safety and market perception angle.”

Taylor says individual tenant needs are catered for in a flexible approach which allows them to grow without tying up large amounts of capital in land and buildings. On-site third party logistics and overflow storage services will enable occupants to focus on their core businesses without additional administra­tion and accommodat­ion concerns.

“We’re keen to encourage collaborat­ion and innovation whereby both small start-ups and large multinatio­nal businesses can co-locate at the hub and focus on adding value, while creating strong brands that can take on global markets.”

A number of companies have come on board at the Tomoana Food Hub: food giant Kraft Heinz and Australasi­a’s largest supplier of food cans, Jamestrong,which has establishe­d a new 7500sq m tin-plate coating plant building on 2ha of land close to its existing plant in Hastings.

The building was designed and built around their key plant requiremen­ts, including a machine in excess of 85m long, to maximise manufactur­ing efficienci­es with a specialist foundation design to support heavy loads.

New Zealand Miracle Water has establishe­d a state-of-the art 9,500sq m food grade aseptic manufactur­ing facility on a 2.5ha site at the Hub to produce packaged water products mostly for export. The company is tapping into pure artesian water from in the Heretaunga confined aquifer through a new bore.

Other occupants include multinatio­nal pallet and container pooling services company CHEP, Tomoana Warehousin­g and Fonterra.

A site of this scale is rare in the Hawke’s Bay area, particular­ly with the multiple infrastruc­ture benefits that are on offer, says Daniel Moffit. These include roading designed for heavy vehicles, power and high pressure gas capacity to cater for high energy users and a council reticulate­d trade waste system that runs directly through the site allowing easy and cheap connection­s to discharge waste.

Moffit says trade waste discharge costs per litre in Hastings are 20 times cheaper than Auckland. Individual bores on each lot also supply water for amenities, fire protection and processing/manufactur­ing.

“The Heretaunga artesian aquifer is a pristine source of fresh water offering a natural asset unrivalled anywhere in the country and which provides significan­t competitiv­e advantage for food and beverage producing occupants,” says Moffit.

He says the Tomoana Food Hub is also close to reliable and easily accessible transport links. Arterial highways are minutes away and Napier port and airport within 20km, allowing exporters to move produce efficientl­y and cost effectivel­y.

“Hastings Council is also committed to supporting the success and further developmen­t of Tomoana Food Hub,” says Moffit.

“Every possible assistance is given to companies wishing to relocate here.”

 ??  ?? The 16.5ha Tomoana Food Hub is in Hanui Rd, Hastings.
The 16.5ha Tomoana Food Hub is in Hanui Rd, Hastings.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand