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Home / Bay of Plenty Times

Tauranga City Council urged not to ‘kill’ Historic Village with rent increases

By Alisha Evans
Bay of Plenty Times·
14 Feb, 2024 01:03 AM4 mins to read

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Dozens of people packed council chambers to support the Incubator Creative Hub. Photo / Alisha Evans

Dozens of people packed council chambers to support the Incubator Creative Hub. Photo / Alisha Evans

Creatives have pleaded for the council not to “kill” Tauranga’s Historic Village by raising the rent.

About 50 people packed council chambers on Monday with signs, art and instruments to throw their support behind the Incubator Creative Hub as part of the Tauranga City Council Long-Term Plan 2024-34 hearings.

Based at the Historic Village, the Incubator is a gallery, music venue and hub for Tauranga’s art and culture scene.

The council is proposing rent increases at the village as part of the plan. Incubator chairperson Phil Hayhoe told the commissioners it was a key community and economic asset.

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”Our community spirit makes a significant, tangible contribution to the fabric of our city. We play a significant role in contributing to community wellbeing.”

 The Incubator Creative Hub would be in a "vulnerable position" if the rent was raised.
The Incubator Creative Hub would be in a "vulnerable position" if the rent was raised.

The proposed rent increase would have an impact on all Historic Village tenants, Hayhoe said.

”We’re in a vulnerable position that will potentially impact the ongoing viability of the Incubator Creative Hub.”

Incubator director Simone Anderson said the proposed operating expense structure for the Historic Village was unrealistic.

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”This commercial thinking puts that vision and future of a vibrant city at real risk.

”We are grappling with the plan, which will make Historic Village inaccessible to so many community organisations.

”These costs are not sympathetic to the funding environment we work in.”

Twelve creatives who use the Incubator spoke in support.

The ukulele group started with the waiata Tūtira Mai Ngā Iwi and commission chairwoman Anne Tolley joined in as the chambers filled with song.

Musician Derek Jacombs said the Jam Factory music venue enriched Tauranga and increased participation for musicians and audiences.

”For many years Tauranga had a terrible national reputation as a musical wasteland.

Incubator director Simone Anderson and chairperson Phil Hayhoe. Photo / Alisha Evans
Incubator director Simone Anderson and chairperson Phil Hayhoe. Photo / Alisha Evans

”The Jam Factory is the smaller, affordable venue that this city needed, and it has changed everything.”

The current reduced rent for the Historic Village shouldn’t have been seen as a subsidy but as an investment in the musical and cultural wellbeing of the city, Jacombs said.

”Like everything that’s new, every tendril of growth, this is a rare and fragile thing.

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”I would urge you not to kill it, don’t tinker with it and please don’t endanger something, which is demonstrably making Tauranga a better place.”

Ōtūmoetai College student Sequoia Trass said she had been going to the Incubator for 10 years because her mum worked there.

”I couldn’t have spent those 10 years any better. I consider myself a creative, and through the Incubator I’ve been able to meet so many like-minded people.

”It’s important to give the community an opportunity to get involved in arts and culture, it connects people,” Trass said.

”The Historic Village was a ghost town prior to the Incubator. The Incubator had made it a collaborative environment for people to get involved in.

”By raising the rent and other necessities to unviable prices, the public are being stripped of their creative opportunities.”

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New Zealand China Friendship Society Tauranga branch president Tina Zhang said the group opened a China culture and arts centre at the Historic Village last year.

Incubator supporters sporting signs to back the creative hub's concerns about increased rent. Photo/ Alisha Evans
Incubator supporters sporting signs to back the creative hub's concerns about increased rent. Photo/ Alisha Evans

”It’s not just about sharing and exchanging cultures, it’s about building a home away from home for our Chinese community.”

The Historic Village was not a commercial hub, it was a gathering place where connections and cultural dialogues flourished, Zhang said.

Tolley responded to the submitters that the 2024-34 plan could be described as the Tauranga arts, sports and culture “standing up and roaring”.

”What you’ve shown us today and what we’ll see in front of us over the next couple of days is that … local government is about people, it’s about communities.

”We do have to balance the budget in the end, but what you are saying to us, and we are hearing loudly is the core of any community is people.”

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The hearings continue.

- LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

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