"We don't need a motorway. We need a pedestrian area so people can shop till they drop basically."
The $4.7 million project hasn't all been above ground, Thames Coromandel District Council Project Manager, Andrew Scobie said.
"Half of that was infrastructure under the ground," he said. "We are tracking well with our costs too. Other things we added was broadband, as it's coming to Whitianga soon, so we have put in ducts for Chorus so they don't have to rip up the new paving in the future."
Most business owners said despite the disruption, the end result had been positive for the community.
Calder admits she was initially sceptical but now that the area outside her shop is finished, she's started to see the benefits with more seating and space for dining customers.
"I've seen what it's done to the town and more people are coming into town and wandering around and that's got to be good for the retailers."
As the popular Coromandel town prepares for the summer influx, its completion can't come soon enough.