Weekend Herald

High-profile sale a boost for Whanganui

-

The sale of the land and buildings that formerly-housed the Mars Petcare NZ facility in Whanganui closes one chapter of the region’s manufactur­ing story but opens another.

Leading New Zealand smallgoods producer Farmland Foods Limited, recently purchased the manufactur­ing facility in Bryce Street, Castleclif­f, and will soon enter a commission­ing phase as it transition­s the property to its food production requiremen­ts.

After a robust marketing campaign that generated strong local, national and internatio­nal enquiry and interest, the land, buildings, plant and extensive chattels inventory were sold for an undisclose­d sum in a transactio­n facilitate­d by Bayleys.

John Bartley, managing director Bayleys Whanganui, said the twostage sales’ campaign drew on Bayleys’ interconne­cted nationwide team to bring the deal together and the Farmlands Foods operation will bring tangible benefit to the regional economy. “Understand­ably, when Mars Petcare announced its closure after 27 years of manufactur­ing in Whanganui, there was an element of sadness that the region was losing a valued business entity and committed employer,” he said.

“However, the announceme­nt that Farmlands Foods would expand their proven operation into Whanganui has been welcomed and its business track record across three generation­s is very positive for the wider regional economy.

“We were heartened by the amount of interest we received for the property, with the initial expression­s of interest stage of the marketing coaxing out multiple parties – many of whom went on to submit offers via the deadline private treaty process that followed.”

While not being drawn on the eventual sales’ price, Bartley says it exceeded expectatio­ns and is unrivalled in terms of transactio­nal value for an industrial property in the region in recent years.

The property is part of the wellestabl­ished Castleclif­f industrial precinct which is home to other foodrelate­d operations such as meat processing. It is located 6km from the city centre and 150m from Whanganui Port.

The freehold 1.55ha site is zoned manufactur­ing/industrial 7A and supports 5,490sqm of buildings including modernised offices, comprehens­ive staff amenities, extensive manufactur­ing, packaging and storage facilities, workshop and plant rooms, with on-site parking for more than 100 vehicles.

“Looking ahead, there is scope to extend the building footprint within site boundaries and this appealed to a broad range of prospectiv­e buyers including developers, owneroccup­iers, add-value investors, and passive investors,” said Bartley.

Farmland Foods Limited began as a family butcher shop in 1964 and is a

100% locally-owned family business that currently operates from a production facility based on the Davis family’s rural property near Bulls.

The directors and their families have all resided in Whanganui since

1994 and are committed to the region and local manufactur­ing.

Increased demand for Farmland products has resulted in the company experienci­ng steady growth for several years.

Managing director Eddie Davis says the purchase of the Mars facility is a natural progressio­n for Farmlands.

“The addition of another site will add the capacity we need for growth and will future proof our current business and operations supplying smallgoods, bacon and ham to supermarke­ts nationwide”.

Farmland Foods currently employs around 120 staff and will look to expand into the Bryce Street facility over the coming months. “We are committed to growing this number as we continue to build our business in Whanganui,” Davis said.

“In addition to future employment opportunit­ies, the site’s conversion to a food manufactur­ing facility will support Whanganui businesses through the plant commission­ing process,” he added.

 ??  ?? Sold: 49 Bryce Street in Whanganui
Sold: 49 Bryce Street in Whanganui

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand