It has about 18,000sq m of retail floorspace on 70,000sq m of land.
The development’s lead broker and Colliers NZ national director of large-format retail, Leroy Wolland, told the Bay of Plenty Times this step had been in the pipeline for several years.
“The site has always been earmarked for future expansion, but we’ve waited until the timing was right.”
Wolland said the focus had been on ensuring they attracted the right mix of tenants to complement the existing centre and met the needs of the growing community.
According to the 2023 Census, Tauranga’s population grew 11.5% between 2018 and 2023.
Stats NZ data showed Pāpāmoa Beach’s population hit 37,800 last year, up about 3200 on the year prior.
The total trade area served by Papamoa Plaza had an estimated 73,290 residents in mid-2024.
Leroy Wolland, leading broker of Papamoa Plaza retail expansion and Colliers’ national director of large-format retail. Photo / Supplied
“One of the key drivers has been community demand for a broader and more diverse retail offering,” Wolland said.
The new development will be approximately 3800sq m.
Wolland said the investment reflected confidence in Pāpāmoa’s continued growth.
“This [development] will prevent the requirement for people to travel to other large-format retail locations further away from Pāpāmoa to carry out their shopping.”
The new development will be built by Naylor Love, with construction scheduled to start later this year and finish by mid-2026.
Expressions of interest were open for retailers, with some international and national brands already confirmed.
Wolland said some were new to the market, and some existing retailers would be relocating. He could not share which brands were confirmed.
Papamoa Plaza will expand, with up to eight new retailers. Photo / Andrew Warner
Kurt Thomson owns Thomson’s Butchery at the plaza and told the Bay of Plenty Times he was strongly in favour of an expansion.
“If it’s going to bring more people, and as long as they do it smartly, get the right stores and they’re not overlapping with what we already have, then I’m all for it.”
Thomson said the Plaza was “definitely busy” and the butchery had anywhere between 150 to 180 customers on weekdays and another 100 on top of that on weekends.
“There are always new people moving to the area, and I think it [expanding] can only be a good thing.
“The population here is growing, so obviously retail has to keep up with it.”
He said his only concern with developments was the potential disruption from the construction process putting customers off.
Pāpāmoa ward councillor Steve Morris said Papamoa Plaza was a great “local choice”.
“The expansion will create construction roles locally in a market that’s crying out for work and, once open, generate ongoing local jobs in retail.”
Morris said the expansion aligned with Pāpāmoa’s “live, learn, work, play” philosophy.
“Pāpāmoa is a town in its own right, and we shouldn’t have to go on a 40km round trip to access shops we need.”
Papamoa Plaza was approached for comment.
Kaitlyn Morrell is a multimedia journalist for the Bay of Plenty Times and Rotorua Daily Post. She has lived in the region for several years and studied journalism at Massey University.