Six bus stops will be spread along Durham St south. Photo / John Borren
The new location of bus stops in Tauranga’s city centre have been described as “suboptimal” by businesses and the commission.
A permanent CBD bus interchange location was decided at a Tauranga City Council meeting on Monday.
Six bus stops will be spread along the southern section of Durham St, between Elizabeth and Spring streets. The estimated cost is $5 million and two rain gardens will be removed to make way for the stops.
Streetscaping, road strengthening and wastewater upgrades on Durham St, completed in 2019, cost $10.5m.
Speaking in Monday’s meeting public forum, Sustainable Bay of Plenty executive director Glen Crowther said all four options presented were “suboptimal”.
Crowther said he worked on Durham St so was involved in the engagement.
“The issue is no property owners anywhere in the CBD … want bus stops by their property. That seems to be the fundamental issue.”
The council should focus on its strategy to deliver a better public transport system, Crowther said.
Getting more people on buses would not happen if the council put a suboptimal CBD bus interchange in place, he said.
“We think you need to pay far more attention to what bus users want than what private property owners want.”
Collier Consultants founder Aaron Collier, representing developers Classic Group and Zariba Holdings, said the option of the six stops was worse than the council’s original proposal because it blocked legal access to their site.
Classic Group and Zariba Holdings jointly own land on Durham St and they had a “significant redevelopment” planned for 142 Durham St.
Collier raised concerns that there wouldn’t be enough space between the bus shelters and the buildings behind to have “active frontages” for business and walkways for pedestrians.
Collier and Crowther both suggested an off-street bus interchange.
Frances de Vantier of Guideline Investors, owners of 162 Durham St, said they were determined to prevent the bus stops from being installed.
“As proprietors of four active shopfronts along Durham St, the prospect of installing bus stops with these shelters poses a significant threat to the commercial viability of our tenants’ businesses.”
She was also concerned about the loss of on-street parking from the bus stops and the narrowness of the street.
Council principal investment adviser transport Tom McEntyre said the council acknowledged the bus stops required compromise on multiple fronts.
The recommended option of six stops between Elizabeth and Spring streets presented the “best outcome”, he said.
“This option does present the best outcome for the greater good of the city, the greater good of the users of the PT [public transport] service, but for the longer term as the city centre development continues at pace.”
The council was also working to secure a lease for an empty site at 199 Cameron Rd that buses could use as layover when they weren’t in use, McEntyre said.
This would significantly reduce the number of stationary buses in the city centre and improve people’s experience, he said.
Commission chair Anne Tolley said the bus stops were conditional on getting a layover space because the noise and disruption from buses idling was unacceptable.
The dilemma the commission faced was where the city bus interchange should go, she said.
It was originally in Willow St but was temporarily relocated to north Durham St in 2022.
Commissioner Shadrach Rolleston said all of the options were “suboptimal”.
“Everybody’s got a view and a perspective and ultimately they don’t want either in front of them.”
It was also not optimal from an accessibility point of view, he said.
“So [we’re] trying to come to a compromise solution that no one’s going to be happy with.”
The six-stop option provided compromises across the board, Rolleston said.
Tolley said the city centre was in a transition and the Durham St stops may not be the solution in 10 years’ time.
When the “major rebuild” of the CBD was complete would be the appropriate time for a successive council to relook at solutions for bus stops, she said.