The commission was required to give its reasons to the minister for rejecting the panel’s recommendations. The report highlighting these said higher building heights in Mount Maunganui North would create more development opportunities, which would improve housing affordability.
It would also contribute to the city’s development capacity requirements, which is how much land a council must have available for housing and commercial activity to meet demand.
While taller buildings may not be built in the short term, if the greater heights were not permitted the council risked being unable to meet its long-term development capacity, the report said.
Tauranga developer Peter Cooney, director of Classic Group, previously told Local Democracy Reportinghe did not believe the apartments wouldn’t create affordable homes.
”You will not create affordability, especially in Mount North, just because the cost of the land so expensive and to go vertical is extremely expensive.
”As soon as you go above three levels, the construction changes and it’s horrendously expensive,” he said.
The commission also rejected the panel’s recommendation around removing a height limit in the city centre.
They wanted to keep the 16m limit on the block of land from McLean St to Spring St between Willow St and The Strand.
This was to ensure amenity of the waterfront and prevent shading from buildings. The site is in front of the $306 million civic precinct Te Manawataki o Te Papa, which is under development.
Plan Change 33 is in response to the Government’s medium-density residential standards (MDRS) that allow for greater intensification in urban areas.
At Monday’s meeting, city planning team leader Janine Speedy said it was a significant plan change for the city in terms of housing intensification.
The MDRS allowed three dwellings to be built on most sites, as well as buildings up to three storeys without resource consent.
The plan change was also to give effect to the Government’s National Policy Statement on Urban Development, said Speedy.
For Tauranga, this meant allowing as much height as possible in the city centre and greater heights and density around the commercial centres within other suburbs of Tauranga, she said.
Building heights between four and six storeys would be enabled in areas within a five to 10-minute walk from some of the city’s commercial centres, including Bayfair in Mount Maunganui and Pāpāmoa Plaza.
Building heights of eight storeys would be allowed along Cameron Rd in the Te Papa peninsula.
In the city centre, buildings up to 13 storeys could be built and eight-storey buildings would be permitted within 1500m of the CBD.
Commissioner Bill Wasley said there were qualifying matters for the plan change that would mean resource consents would be needed if buildings didn’t meet the urban design and impact requirements or exceeded the number of permissible dwellings on a site.
LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.