The New Zealand Herald

Philanthro­pist, Giltrap Group founder Sir Colin Giltrap dies

- Anne Gibson

Sir Colin Giltrap, the philanthro­pist and businessma­n who founded the influentia­l and powerful Giltrap Group about 60 years ago, died on Wednesday night aged 84.

Giltrap, knighted for his contributi­on to motorsport and his generosity to many people and causes over decades, spent a lifetime in the motor vehicle industry, although in more recent years he had handed over to sons Richard and Michael Giltrap.

However, the founder and director in his early 80s remained active within the business, headquarte­red at 119 Great North Rd, Grey Lynn.

Giltrap Group has significan­t land holdings on both sides of Great North Rd near the Ponsonby Rd intersecti­on, due to the founder’s foresight.

Giltrap Group says: “It all began in the 1960s when a young, car-mad Colin Giltrap co-founded Hamilton luxury car dealership, Monaco Motors.”

In the early 1970s, Giltrap bought Matamata Motors and then a Mazda and Audi dealership at 444 Great North Rd, Auckland.

From there he expanded along that Great North Rd strip, buying many neighbouri­ng properties.

Giltrap Group says that in 1977 he founded European Motor Distributo­rs, which bought the rights for Volkswagen and, later, Audi.

In the 1980s, Giltrap bought Schofields in Newmarket.

“Coutts Cars becomes a standalone BMW dealership, Coutts BMW at 150 Great North Rd, with Giltrap North Shore also hosting BMW. Audi, VW Porsche, Rolls Royce and Bentley moved to 101 Great North Rd, under a new dealership called Giltrap Prestige.

“This dealership also retailed General Motors products and later on Nissan,” the business said of that phase.

Giltrap also bought half of Archibald & Shorter in Greenlane, giving it a stake in that Jaguar dealership.

By 1989, Giltrap had bought a Toyota franchise at 101 Great North Rd and he got the rights to distribute Mercedes-Benz in New Zealand. He built a new showroom at 100 Great North Rd and the Giltrap Motor Group was renamed Giltrap Prestige.

By the 1990s, that business had become New Zealand’s only Aston Martin dealership and it bought the rights to distribute Skoda nationally.

New purpose-built showrooms were then developed for Audi, Volkswagen and Porsche at 100 Great North Rd and by the early 2000s, Giltrap had become this country’s only Lamborghin­i dealership.

In 2012, Giltrap was made a Knight Companion of the Order of New Zealand for his services to motorsport and his philanthro­py, saying he wasn’t sure what to make of his title.

“I didn’t realise when I first received it in the new year quite how much it meant but I’m starting to slowly get used to it.

“I’m still a little bit trepiditio­us about it because I’m still Colin to everybody and a few of the staff don’t know whether to call me Sir Colin or Colin but, I mean, I want to get the message around that I haven’t changed: I’m just Colin, always have been and always will be.”

The Herald reported then that he was a patron of the McLaren Trust and had supported numerous young drivers, and had contribute­d to many sporting events and charities including the Canterbury Earthquake Appeal and the Starship Foundation.

“It might not be big donations, it might be two and a half grand here, a thousand there and that sort of thing, but we enjoy helping New Zealanders where we can,” he said.

By 2017, his business had new $40 million headquarte­rs, which won a national award from the New Zealand Institute of Architects.

Earlier last decade, Giltrap Group became 100 per cent owner of Archibald & Shorter (Auckland) as well as Roverland (North Shore). In 2018, SEAT New Zealand opened its first dealership in Newmarket and by 2021, Polestar and Lotus became part of the Giltrap Group.

Sir Colin is survived by wife Lady Jennifer, their adult children and their families.

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Sir Colin Giltrap

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