Tauranga museum director Greg McManus in the Tauranga Heritage Collection taonga store. Photo / John Borren
Tauranga’s first museum will open in 2028, but work on it has already begun. Local Democracy Reporting toured the city’s heritage collection and met the people who will bring the museum to life.
It’s a milestone with a lot of history – in more ways than one.
From the 25 years of discussions and multiple failed attempts to get a museum off the ground, to the carefully collated collection of artifacts dating back to the 14th century awaiting a home.
Museums were also a tourism drawcard and one goal of Te Manawataki o Te Papa was to be an attraction that kept people, especially cruise ship passengers, in the city, he said.
Many travelled to Hobbiton in Matamata or to Rotorua for the myriad cultural experiences it offered, McManus said.
“I’m a museum person first and foremost, but I’m also a tourism person and museums play a really important role in tourism in New Zealand.”
Tourism New Zealand statistics showed after shopping, visiting museums and galleries was one of the top three things overseas tourists did, he said.
“There’s the soft, community-building cultural side of things, which is our main reason for being, and then there’s a tourism side of it, which is how we get money to pay for that.”
The precinct is unlikely to be self-sustaining – projected running costs are $30m a year.
Museum curator Fiona Kean said the collection had everything you would expect from a museum.
They have about 5000 textile items, from curtains once belonging to Napoleon to a line of locally made Expozay swimwear.
The brand was started by Tauranga residents Tony and Judy Alvos in 1976.
Viewing the collection online brought back instant childhood memories of playing at the Mount beach and the need to find the photo of my mum wearing the exact bikini that is now a museum piece.
There are photos, WWI and II memorabilia, a native animal taxidermy diorama used in schools and game fishing marlin casts that once hung in the iconic Oceanside Hotel. The popular watering hole was demolished in 1995 to make way for high-rise apartments.
“It’s quite varied and when we get the museum it will really help to give some depth to the objects as well,” said Kean.
The taonga store has 12,000 mainly Māori and Polynesian artefacts.
The rarest is a 14th-century wooden canoe bailer that was found in Tauriko in the 1980s and restored over six years.
Te Pou Arahi cultural heritage manager Dean Flavell said it showed the early Polynesian arrival to Aotearoa.
“It’s exploring that whole idea of when people come to a new place, they explore and they utilise some of the material that they find.”
About 90% of the taonga collection, which includes poupou and epa panels from marae and stone tools used to build pā, was found in the Western Bay of Plenty, Flavell said.
He has worked at the council for 25 years and said he had seen every rendition of a museum, but this one felt different.