Bay of Plenty Times

Consultati­on on civic precinct

Experience­d board critical to deliver $303m project, says Tolley

- Alisha Evans — Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air.

Tauranga City commission­ers are progressin­g plans to develop a council-controlled organisati­on to deliver the $303 million civic precinct project. Te Manawataki o Te Papa, in Tauranga’s city centre, will include a library, museum, civic whare and events centre.

At a Tauranga City Council meeting on Monday commission­ers agreed to consult with the community on creating the council-controlled organisati­on (CCO) that would govern delivery of the project.

Due to its significan­ce, a review was commission­ed by the council earlier this year into potential options for delivering Te Manawataki o Te Papa. Carried out by Max Pedersen Consulting, it assessed various options and resulted in a recommenda­tion that a CCO be establishe­d to govern and lead the projects.

Council general manager of corporate services Alastair Mcneil told the commission­ers the investment in the precinct needed to “meet the needs of the community, but come within budget as well”.

Mcneil said the CCO would likely have a chief executive and a “relatively small board” with the leader experience­d in delivering similarsca­le projects.

He said the estimated set-up cost of the CCO was $100,000 with an ongoing cost of around $600,000 a year. Commission chairwoman Anne Tolley agreed having an experience­d board was “critical” because no one at the council had built a museum or undertaken a landscapin­g developmen­t on that scale before.

“Not only the funders have to have confidence in us, but also the community has to have confidence and that’s absolutely critical to the project,” she said.

Commission­er Stephen Selwood said the board of the CCO would “provide a level of assurance” and “risk management” to the commission­ers, but also the new council when it was elected in 2024.

“As the project proceeds there are bound to be fish hooks, issues, supply cost rises, all of those sorts of challenges in the delivery of the project.

“The board basically brings a set of expertise that we otherwise wouldn’t have.”

In terms of the cost of the CCO, Selwood said: “This is a relatively small amount to pay relative to the project cost and the value that it will deliver in terms of confidence to potential funders as well.”

In a statement after the meeting, Tolley said the proposed CCO could draw upon a wide range of industry and commercial expertise, which would enhance the delivery of Te Manawataki o Te Papa.

Te Manawataki o Te Papa will be developed over the next eight to 10 years, with $150 million of the project funded by ratepayers. The community will be able to provide feedback on the CCO proposal from Monday until December 2.

The commission is expected to make a final decision at a council meeting on December 12.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? An artist's impression of the future civic precinct Te Manawataki o Te Papa.
An artist's impression of the future civic precinct Te Manawataki o Te Papa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand