The Northern Advocate

Baylys Beach set for celebratio­n

Community centre constructi­on a journey from go, to woe, to completion

- Karina Cooper

Afive-year journey burdened by theft and funding woes has reached its destinatio­n with the official opening of the new community hub at Baylys Beach.

This weekend will set the scene for activities and workshops showcasing the centre’s capacity to be a thriving hub of community going-ons, as well as a home for beach lifeguards.

The surf club housed in the centre has showers, beds and a garage space for quads, IRBs (inflatable rescue boats) and other rescue equipment.

Graeme Ramsey, the community centre project manager and former Kaipara mayor, said he was “absolutely thrilled” to get to this point following numerous obstacles.

Funding for the centre nearly ran dry in November last year before a $262,000 cheque from the Lottery Grants Board provided the financial boost needed to complete the constructi­on.

And apprentice Hamish Cripps, helping to build the centre, had $14,000 worth of gear stolen from the site in an October raid.

“But what we have had is tremendous community support,” Ramsey said.

“We are a great community and this building will act as a connection which we hadn’t had since we lost the old hall.”

Ramsey believed community contributi­ons – in the form of donations, volunteeri­ng time and resources – had pushed the quality of the hub up.

“It’s funky but not over the top. The brief was for the building to fit into the local community and be a part of it, but be an interestin­g building, not just a box.”

The build was architectu­rally designed by Janka Nemeth from Auckland, who considers Baylys Beach her second home.

Constructi­on for the new building began mid-2019 but the desire for a community centre – home to surf life saving accommodat­ion – was born years ago.

“This will act as a hub for community services and water safety, which is crucial for us. We are a wild west coast beach and what is paramount in local people’s minds is having something which will keep people safe,” Ramsey said.

Previously Baylys Beach was patrolled by paid guards who rented accommodat­ion in local baches during peak season.

This summer will be the first time volunteers patrol alongside paid guards on the weekend as the club starts to build - a feat made possible with the new surf club, Baylys Beach Surf Life Saving Club captain Kyran Gillespie said.

“It has been awesome. For the last 10 years we haven’t had a home or a base but now we have a permanent space for our much-needed service.”

Weekend patrols will start on December 26 and run until Waitangi Day weekend with volunteer patrols starting on January 9.

The Tasman Sea batters Baylys Beach and the surf is notoriousl­y dangerous. Several people have died there, including a mother trying to rescue her child in February.

Dylan Robinson, 13, of Henderson, west Auckland, drowned there in August 2012, and two people drowned there early in 2006 - 46-year-old Alexander Stewart and Kevan Moore.

The idea to build a community centre where neighbours can get together and foster local connection­s came from a Baylys Beach resident who wished not to be named and has since died.

That person had left a “significan­t donation” to finance the project, Baylys Beach Community Trust chairman Grant Suckling said, and the Baylys Beach Community Trust has since managed the project.

 ?? Photo / Tania Whyte ?? Apprentice carpenter Hamish Cripps works on the Baylys Beach community centre opening at the end of this month.
Photo / Tania Whyte Apprentice carpenter Hamish Cripps works on the Baylys Beach community centre opening at the end of this month.
 ??  ?? Grant Suckling
Grant Suckling

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand