The Northland Age

Full steam ahead

Steam train, ferry will link top attraction­s

- Peter de Graaf

It’s finally full steam ahead for a plan to link the Bay of Island’s top attraction­s by vintage steam train and ferry thanks to a multimilli­on-dollar Provincial Growth Fund grant.

The $5.59 million cash injection was announced at Kawakawa railway station last Friday by Regional Economic Developmen­t Minister Shane Jones, accompanie­d by Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters, Tourism Minister Kelvin Davis and a who’s who of Northland’s tourist industry.

Also unveiled was a $1.96m training scheme to help Northland tourism and hospitalit­y businesses retain and upskill staff during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The grants come just days after the Government announced $20m from its $3 billion post-Covid infrastruc­ture fund for Whanga¯ rei projects including CBD rejuvenati­on and a 850-seat theatre and conference venue at Hihiaua Cultural Centre, and a week after Jones pledged $7.5m for ecological and Ma¯ ori tourism projects in the Kerikeri area.

The $5.59m grant will go to Northland Adventure Experience (NAX), a consortium bringing together the Bay of Islands Vintage Railway, the 110-year-old steam ferry Minerva, the Twin Coast Cycle Trail, Far North Holdings and local iwi Nga¯ ti Hine.

NAX chairman Frank Leadley said the cash would be used to extend the railway shed at Kawakawa so all carriages could be stored indoors, build a new engineerin­g workshop and job training centre, and order a new boiler for the steam locomotive Gabriel.

It would also complete the

Minerva’s restoratio­n and allow the railway track to O¯ pua to be reinstated.

Leadley said the idea was to link the coast-to-coast cycle trail and the vintage railway with the Minerva, which would then ferry passengers to Russell and Waitangi.

The combined excursion would be unique not just in New Zealand but in the world, Leadley said.

The project is expected to create 68 jobs during constructi­on and 25 long-term.

It was a case of second time lucky for NAX, which was turned down after applying for just under $19m in PGF funding last year.

After that setback the consortium was advised to break the project up into parts, get other funders on board, and try again.

Friday’s grant does not cover the vintage railway’s plans for a new station at Colenso’s Triangle near O¯ pua, nor does it pay for re-routing of 6.5km of cycle trail from Taumarere to O¯ pua. That leg of the bike trail currently sits on top of the rail track.

The Far North District Council will pay for a new cycle trail, still within the rail corridor, while councilown­ed company Far North Holdings will build the station on a commercial basis.

More than 300 people turned out to hear the announceme­nts and speeches which included a convoluted story from Jones about a one-legged gymnast sparking a riot in Kawakawa, Davis recounting family connection­s to the railway, and Peters berating national media for ignoring the provinces and lauding the Government for pumping $500m-plus into “one of the most neglected provinces in the country”.

The council is still working out how it will fund re-routing of the cycle trail. Chief executive Shaun Clarke said $2.6m had already been committed over the next two years in the council’s long-term plan so some of the work could start straight away.

Meanwhile, the $1.96m training programme will be run by Queenstown Resort College’s Paihia campus.

The scheme was spearheade­d by Duke of Marlboroug­h Hotel co-owner Riki Kinnaird and will see 250 tourism

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 ?? Photos / Peter de Graaf ?? Regional Economic Developmen­t Minister Shane Jones donned a railway cap at Kawakawa station yesterday to announce $7.5 million in PGF funding for Bay of Islands tourism projects and training.
Photos / Peter de Graaf Regional Economic Developmen­t Minister Shane Jones donned a railway cap at Kawakawa station yesterday to announce $7.5 million in PGF funding for Bay of Islands tourism projects and training.
 ??  ?? Regional Economic Developmen­t Minister Shane Jones tests the whistle on Esmae, one of the Bay of Islands Vintage Railway’s diesel locomotive­s, after yesterday’s funding announceme­nt.
Regional Economic Developmen­t Minister Shane Jones tests the whistle on Esmae, one of the Bay of Islands Vintage Railway’s diesel locomotive­s, after yesterday’s funding announceme­nt.

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