Marine Park at Sulphur Point in Tauranga. Photo / University of Waikato
A state-of-the-art marine research and education facility will be established at Sulphur Point in Tauranga after years of controversy surrounding the future of the site.
Tauranga City Council and the University of Waikato today announced their agreement to lease a site at Marine Park to establish the new facility.
The tender process for leasing the land was completed in March last year with the council receiving only one tender.
The announcement comes after community protests, including a petition to “Save Marine Park” from people concerned the green-space reserve would be lost forever.
It also follows council efforts to revoke the park’s reserve status in 2018 that was blocked by then Conservation Minister Eugenie Sage in July 2020.
Through its tender, the university had demonstrated the capability to establish and operate such a facility, the council said in a statement.
Negotiations with the university began in April last year, finishing in June this year.
In the statement, the council said Marine Park was an ideal site for the new facility because it was on the edge of Tauranga Harbour and “offered access to a diverse range of marine environments”.
The new facility will replace the university’s Coastal Marine Field Station and include research laboratories, classrooms, and public engagement spaces.
It will be equipped with the latest technology to enable innovative research and education in marine science, conservation, and sustainability, complementing the university’s Durham St campus and Mount Maunganui Adams Centre, the statement said.
Council chairwoman Anne Tolley said in the statement this was a chance for the city to assert its position as a leader in marine research and education and the facility represented “huge opportunities” for Tauranga, global research and “future generations of New Zealand”.
University vice-chancellor Professor Neil Quigley said in the statement the facility would put the Bay of Plenty on the global stage for marine science.
University marine scientist Professor Chris Battershill said the unique marine environments around the Bay of Plenty region made the location of the new facility a “nationally and naturally significant base to examine resilience in our increasingly stressed marine estate while identifying advances for our blue economy”.
“Tauranga is uniquely placed to foster the education and research of different marine environments.
“This will be the only facility in New Zealand, and perhaps the world, with access to almost all marine habitats on its doorstep — from catchments, beaches and lakes to Whakaari/White Island and the largest working harbour in the country,” Battershill said.
“This new facility will enable us to learn critical ways to protect our marine life by making the invisible visible, so we can continue to enjoy our special connection with the water.”
Priority One chief executive Nigel Tutt said in the statement there were huge opportunities in New Zealand marine sciences, biotechnologies and aquaculture.
“The new facility at Marine Park will provide access to the world-class expertise needed to push this forward; helping our country to develop exciting new export sectors and providing us with excellent environmental research.”
Tauranga MP Sam Uffindell said in the statement the new facility was another exciting step forward for Tauranga, and would help bring higher-skilled and better-paid jobs to the city.
“This exciting collaboration between the University of Waikato and Tauranga City Council will help develop Tauranga as a leading hub in aquaculture and biotech.
Tauranga man Neil Pollett has previously led opposition to development at the park, saying it was a green-space reserve the city will “never get back”.
“I’m just concerned for the future of the city that [the council is] promoting high growth in the Te Papa peninsula and are simultaneously removing any green space and any public space that people can enjoy,” Pollett said at the time.
There were other places in the city the university could go, Pollet said.
The university will now progress with funding and design, and obtaining the necessary consents required to build the facility.