Whanganui Chronicle

Foodstuffs moves into giant new base

- Anne Gibson

Staff have moved into New Zealand’s biggest new building which has nearly 8ha of indoor floorspace, equivalent to eight rugby fields.

Chris Quin, Foodstuffs North Island chief executive, said two new buildings on the site at Ma¯ngere on land leased for 30 years from Auckland Airport were now staffed.

The 77,500sq m ambient distributi­on centre [DC] now being stocked has by far the largest footprint of any building in this country, he said.

The 7.7ha centre where 350 people work stands beside the new 9000sq m headquarte­rs or support office where around 950 people work on the same site at 35 The Landing Dr.

John Dakin, Goodman Property Trust chief executive, confirmed that a building with a 7.7ha footprint would be this country’s largest. The trust’s largest is its 52,000sq m Linfox distributi­on centre, also at Ma¯ngere. The Sistema building nearby is around 60,000sq m.

The Australian has reported how that country’s largest new building is the 200,000sq m fulfilment centre for online retail behemoth Amazon in Sydney’s Oakdale west, being built by Goodman. Its site is equivalent to the

size of Melbourne’s Chadstone shopping centre or about 24 rugby league fields, the Australian said.

Quin said the new Foodstuffs North Island DC at Ma¯ngere’s 35 The Landing Dr off George Bolt Memorial Dr replaced eight buildings including in Rotorua, to centralise grocery distributi­on operations in the country’s most densely populated area of the upper North Island.

Goods for more than 100 of Foodstuffs North Island’s 153 supermarke­ts are serviced from the new 7.8ha distributi­on centre. The business has another DC in Palmerston North.

Quin announced the move in February 2018, saying then they would shift in 2020.

Monk McKenzie designed the new HQ, explaining how it was “conceived conceptual­ly as an elegant structure that emerges from the surroundin­g landscape. Constructe­d earth bunds at both ends of the building rise to meet a concrete roof that arcs across the building’s 100m length. This singular gesture emphasises the cooperativ­e grocer’s connection­s with the land and the movement from garden to table — a movement from the rawness of the landscape to the crafted interior.” Eclipse Architectu­re designed the DC.

Quin said it was important for Foodstuffs to pick Kiwi architects. Although buildings were finished on time towards the end of last year, it was not convenient to move before Christmas, he said.

Lindsay Rowles, Foodstuffs North Island’s membership and property general manager, headed the developmen­t work and said the site was “absolutely perfect”.

Hawkins built the new 5-star certified HQ. Macrennie Auckland built the DC which has 2915 solar roof panels to generate all the HQ’s electricit­y.

Tim O’Leary, Macrennie DC project manager, said: “It was daunting and exciting to take on this project as the 13th biggest single roof warehouse in the world. It’s the largest we’ve undertaken.”

Up to 80,000 pallets can be stored in the new DC.

The HQ’s ground floor has a metrostyle supermarke­t, click and collect lockers, Pikopiko Espresso cafe, commercial kitchen, bar, boardroom, informal reception area and conference space for up to 300 people.

The new hub will be officially opened on April 28.

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 ??  ?? The new distributi­on centre — which is the size of eight rugby fields — will supply more than 100 Foodstuffs supermarke­ts. Right: Foodstuffs North Island chief executive Chris Quin.
The new distributi­on centre — which is the size of eight rugby fields — will supply more than 100 Foodstuffs supermarke­ts. Right: Foodstuffs North Island chief executive Chris Quin.

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