The New Zealand Herald

Sleepyhead’s $1b dream

Kiwi bedding moguls planning huge new manufactur­ing community in Waikato with hundreds of affordable homes for staff. Andrea Fox reports. 100,000sq m factory space 1500 new jobs created 1100 new homes built

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Amassive new $1 billion manufactur­ing and affordable housing community is planned for Ohinewai, north Waikato, by the company behind iconic Kiwi brand Sleepyhead, which has outgrown Auckland and wants its staff to be able to buy their own homes.

Comfort Group has bought 176ha of rural land, 5km north of Huntly, where under a master plan it intends to develop a mixed-use community with 1100 new homes over the next 10 years, while boosting its manufactur­ing space from 30,000sq m to 100,000sq m with a cutting-edge factory.

The proposal has been publicly

notified with two objections received. One was from Mercury Energy, which noted the developmen­t would be on a flood plain, and the other from Fish & Game.

The new community would create homes for up to 3000 residents and the new factory about 1500 new jobs.

Comfort Group, Australasi­a’s biggest bedmaker and a significan­t exporter, owns the Sleepyhead, SleepMaker and Dunlop Foams brand, and employs 500 people in three sites at O¯ta¯huhu, Avondale and Glen Innes.

Director Craig Turner said the fourth-generation family-owned business had been unable to grow as it wanted because of space constraint­s in Auckland.

But building a new manufactur­ing base is only part of the story behind the staged developmen­t, which still requires Environmen­t Court approval for a significan­t zoning change.

It will be called the Sleepyhead

For many of the people that work for us, housing is not affordable. Craig Turner

Estate. “Housing is such an important component of this. For many of the people that work for us, housing is not affordable — certainly not in Auckland,” Turner said.

“Our dream is to provide an opportunit­y for people who work for us and for others in the community to be able to get into their own home, to have equity in something as they work. Currently, that is incredibly hard to do if not impossible.”

The goal is to keep the house prices under $500,000, he said.

While it could be said $500,000 was hardly “affordable”, Turner believes “we can make it work”.

“With a bit of assistance from the company and the banks — and banks are very keen to help — for a worker in our place it is possible they could fund that sort of money.”

The new estate will ultimately host a 66ha industrial hub, 33ha of new housing and 60ha of public open space.

The Sleepyhead Estate will not be a dormitory suburb of Auckland, requiring residents to drive to shopping and community facilities. These will be incorporat­ed in the new community.

“This is a community-based programme. We expect lots of others to show an interest and join us,” Turner said.

“Ohinewai is a beautiful little area . . . there’s a lot of opportunit­y, the [Waikato] river is fantastic and there are lakes for water activities and cycle trails and walkways.

“The whole plan is for residents to be able to live, eat and work in the area, and not to have to drive for 30 to 40 minutes and spend all that money on petrol.”

Target business occupants include factory outlets. Turner said the project hopes to attract “some of the big names of Europe”. Some of the company’s suppliers were likely to follow it south.

No developmen­t contracts had yet been signed, or building partners appointed.

The first stage will be the constructi­on of a facility for the foam manufactur­ing and underlay division, due for completion by the end of next year.

The site, 40 minutes south of Comfort Group’s O¯ta¯huhu headquarte­rs, is beside the new Waikato Expressway and a rail siding will be built to transport the company’s imported and exported products to and from the ports of Tauranga and Auckland.

The company’s exit from Auckland will be staged over

several years. In the meantime, the company will subsidise the travel costs of Auckland resident staff who will work at Ohinewai.

Turner said some staff were already driving to Auckland from Hamilton and Huntly and many lived south of the company’s current sites and were

spending up to 40 minutes driving to work each day.

He said time would tell how many staff wanted to make the move south.

Turner said while the concept of creating a whole new estate was new for New Zealand, it was not unusual overseas. Ohinewai was the only logical place to move to,

Turner said.

“We had two cracks at moving within Auckland but there were space constraint­s and complaints about industrial activity. Road and rail access are critical for us — rail especially. They’re talking about developing rail north [of Auckland] over the next 30 years but that’s too long for us.”

To the south, Pokeno was fully developed, fast-growing Te Kauwhata was a housing area, and after Huntly, the rail line split two ways. Meremere’s wetlands ruled out that area and iwi wouldn’t sell.

“Because it’s so important to get the pricing right on this project we won’t lease. We struck a farmer at Ohinewai who was keen to talk. It’s a perfect location.”

Turner said Comfort Group had not been able to develop its manufactur­ing in Auckland because of a space squeeze.

It couldn’t grow into other areas of the sleepware business it wanted to, such as pillow, sheet and duvet manufactur­e and had limited production space for underlay.

“We are a reasonable-sized exporter and with another project we have on, our estimate over the next approximat­ely six to eight years is we will be up to around 1500 staff.”

Investment needed to complete the Sleepyhead Estate was $1b.

No estimates of economic benefits were yet available.

Comfort Group has worked closely with the Waikato District Council and Waikato regional economic agency Te Waka on the project.

Mayor Allan Sanson said Craig Turner and his brother Graeme were “passionate” about their staff.

“This isn’t about building a factory. It’s about building a community.

“It’s a powerful and compelling story about helping the less privileged.”

Te Waka chairman Dallas Fisher said Comfort Group would be the second major business to move from Auckland to the Waikato. Corrugated packaging giant Visy built a $100 million factory at Hamilton Airport last year.

“I believe this is the first of many to come. The Waikato is open for business.”

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 ?? Photo / NZME ?? Sleepyhead had two attempts at expanding its Auckland operations within the city but couldn’t find adequate space.
Photo / NZME Sleepyhead had two attempts at expanding its Auckland operations within the city but couldn’t find adequate space.
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