In what is being dubbed as a significant step in addressing Tauranga’s housing shortage, Tauranga City Council has reached an agreement with Venture Developments Ltd for the development of at least 307 new dwellings on the property known as “Smiths Farm”.
Tauranga mayor Mahé Drysdale said the project is poised to deliver a range of housing solutions, including affordable homes, in the heart of the community.
”Smiths Farm, located between Bethlehem and Tauriko, has long been recognised as a strategic opportunity for housing development.
“The project will help to boost housing supply in Tauranga, which is needed to address the urgent need for more affordable and medium-density homes.
”This development is expected to help mitigate the city’s housing crisis by offering diverse housing options that cater to various needs and price points.
“This strategic partnership reflects the shared commitment to increasing housing supply, with an agreed minimum density of 307 new dwellings planned for the site.”
The council selected Venture Developments as the preferred developer for Smiths Farm after an extensive evaluation process.
The agreement includes the sale of land for $34 million based on the expected developable area.
Venture Developments chief executive Jarod Thorpe said now the agreement is unconditional the next phase of planning and development can begin.
”Initial works are expected to begin soon with a range of section sizes and house typologies to be delivered.
“Section sizes range from 3000sq m on the outer edges with medium density housing built in the heart of the subdivision.
“ All sections and houses will take advantage of the elevated views that capture important landmarks such as Mauao.
”Close to the Bethlehem town centre and Tauranga CBD, the first homes are anticipated to be ready for occupancy by mid-2028, and the entire project expected to be completed by 2031. Timing is dependent on NZTA completing the access road from the new Takitimu Northern Link expressway.”
Venture Developments will partner with the Bay of Plenty Housing Equity Fund (HEF) to deliver 21 affordable housing units as part of the development.”
Tauranga mayor Mahé Drysdale. Photo / Supplied
Drysdale said delivery of affordable housing was a critical outcome for council.
“Council has committed to invest $20 million into the HEF, which is designed to support long-term housing affordability across the region.
“Out of this overall funding, $5 million was conditional on the delivery of affordable housing at Smiths Farm. A
“s well as providing affordable housing, the development will stimulate economic growth by creating construction jobs and related opportunities throughout the development cycle, while also improving the housing market’s overall health in Tauranga.”
7 comments
Hmmm
Posted on 23-10-2024 10:24 | By Let's get real
Was this put out to tender or is this otherwise questionable..?
$34 million doesn't appear to be a large sum of money for such a profitable venture on this site.
Another Bad Decision
Posted on 23-10-2024 12:34 | By formulafuzz
This is yet another bad decision by our Council. Added housing increases density and pressure on infrastructure (Water, sewage, roading, etc). So long as they continue doing this our lifestyles and standard of living will deteriorate. Just as important, Smiths Farm would have been the ideal Green Space / Recreation area. We desperately need both.
The Master
Posted on 23-10-2024 13:53 | By Ian Stevenson
@ Get real, the answer is noted clearly in the recitals/article above... it says "preferred developer".
TCC has a lot of "preferred consultants, contractors and so on..." these are the "PETS" that then are the only ones allowed to look at anything. The criteria is interesting, a "PETS" past failures, cost blowout, anything adverse is only allowed to be considered is the "PETS" raises it. So of course all the "PETS" are perfect in very way possible...
Come on
Posted on 23-10-2024 13:56 | By Informed
Love the comments. One person can't figure out that it went to market and the other doesn't understand that the council.has to deliver on housing growth (it's the law)
Seems Low
Posted on 23-10-2024 15:09 | By Yadick
$34 million seems a very, very good deal for the developers . . .
What was the selection process?
At that price I would hope the developers will be paying for ALL, and I mean ALL, infrastructure requirements.
Smiths Farm
Posted on 23-10-2024 17:08 | By peter pan
Affordable homes what price is he talking about, and can the person on the minimum wage be able to get one ,i don't thing so.
The Master
Posted on 25-10-2024 13:01 | By Ian Stevenson
@ Informed
Yes, the sale went to market, in the usual TCC way, with the "favorites" and PETS alone the only ones allowed to look n see.
Yes TCC has legal obligations to the community for housing, hence why it is an utter mess, few sections available, little appearing anytime soon and the costs/prices soring for the sky and some.
Yes, TCC is all over this mess 24/7.
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