Otago Daily Times

Crosscount­ry skifield urgently seeks council funding

- REGAN HARRIS regan.harris@odt.co.nz

SNOW Farm, New Zealand’s only crosscount­ry skifield, is urgently seeking $450,000 from the Queenstown Lakes District Council (QLDC) to help save it from an ‘‘existentia­l crisis’’.

Speaking at a hearing for the council’s 202324 draft annual plan in Wa¯naka on Monday, Pisa Alpine Charitable Trust (Pact) chairman Samuel Belk said Snow Farm was running ‘‘by the smell of an oily rag’’ in a temporary structure consisting of containers, portable cabins and portable toilets.

‘‘This is barely sustainabl­e this year and unsustaina­ble in the future.’’

Pact, which operates the skifield on the councilown­ed Waiorau recreation reserve, has found itself in need of funds for a new headquarte­rs after its lease on an existing lodge was terminated by the Southern Hemisphere Proving Ground (SHPG) last October.

Pact is requesting council funding from this year’s budget for a $300,000 public toilet, shelter and utilities building, and an additional $150,000 for the constructi­on of a 120space carpark.

The facilities would be the first step in a multimilli­ondollar developmen­t that would eventually include a headquarte­rs with a reception, ticketing, lockers, rental area and classroom space.

The appeal marks the first time Pact has requested QLDC funding since ownership of the reserve was transferre­d to the council in 2012.

Mr Belk made the case that the Snow Farm was a part of community infrastruc­ture serving the entire district and therefore warranted some investment from the council.

‘‘To survive, the Snow Farm needs toilets and parking, and later on a base building.’’

Pact anticipate­s it will need about $1.6 million to complete the first stage of the project, including the $450,000 it is seeking from the council.

A second phase of constructi­on is estimated to require a further $975,000. Pact is asking the council to also consider making a $500,000 contributi­on to this phase in their 202425 budget.

Subject to funding, Pact hopes to have the first stage of the project completed by June 2024, and the entire facility built by June 2025.

Fellow Pact trustee John Hogg said the loss of their previous lodge had ‘‘come out of left field’’.

‘‘We need a toilet and parking facilities now at a time when our resources have been depleted by the building of the musterer’s hut.’’

Completed just last year, the 36bed musterer’s hut was a $750,000 project that was designed to host visiting schools.

Pact funded the project from a combinatio­n of community grants and trusts, internally­generated funds and donations.

Snow Farm hosts more than 15,000 users each winter season, including 48 New Zealand schools.

The site also has visitors in the summer months, the area being available to mountainbi­kers and hikers.

Speaking at the hearing, QLDC councillor Cody Tucker acknowledg­ed the importance of having suitable facilities on the skifield by sharing a story of his own misfortune on the slopes.

‘‘My first crosscount­ry skiing experience we went snow farming in the hut there as well. It was pretty great.

‘‘I had a dodgy curry that night and so the next morning I was passing Olympians . . . trying to rush to the toilets.’’

The council received 301 written submission­s in response to its 202324 draft annual plan, and heard from members of the public on 59 of those submission­s at the hearing.

The council is expected to approve a final version of the annual plan next month.

Ablution solutions sought . . . Pisa Alpine Charitable Trust members (from left) John Hogg, of Wa¯naka, Peter Soundy, of Arrowtown, and Samuel Belk, of Queenstown, check documents before making their annual plan submission for toilets and a carpark at the Snow Farm.

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