The new Tauranga City Council offices at 90 Devonport Rd are ready for staff. Photo / David Hall.
The new Tauranga City Council offices at 90 Devonport Rd are ready for staff. Photo / David Hall.
The Tauranga City Council’s chief executive has defended the $91.9 million, 15-year cost to lease its new building, saying this enables the council to adapt to a changing workforce.
The council’s 1000 or so administration staff have started moving into the eight-storey eco-building at 90 Devonport Rd in Tauranga‘s CBD.
Built by LT McGuinness, it has a 6 Green Star Design rating and features rainwater harvesting, electric vehicle charging and facilities that encourage active commuting.
LT McGuinness project director Craig Body. Photo / Tauranga City Council
LT McGuinness project director Craig Body said not damaging the timber elements during construction was challenging at times.
“This was a finished product right from day one, so everybody had to treat it like a piece of skirting or a piece of scotia [moulding].”
Body said the use of timber cut down noise – screws in wood rather than drilling into concrete.
Prefabricated timber sped up construction and six people put in the structural elements, he said.
Steel frames seismically connected the timber structure to the ground, making it a hybrid building, Body said.
The first floor has council meeting chambers and a councillors’ lounge. A cafe would lease ground floor space and be open to the public, with outdoor dining.
Warren and Mahoney principal architect Asha Page designed the interior fit-out. Photo / Tauranga City Council
Natural inspiration
Warren and Mahoney principal architect Asha Page designed the $33.5m interior fit-out, which included meeting rooms, offices, flooring finishes, electrical, digital and IT.
She said level two was her favourite floor because it felt like you were in the pōhutukawa tree growing on the harbour side of the building.
The tree inspired the interior colour palette, earth tones mirroring the trunk on lower floors, then blue to represent the harbour, green like the leaves, with the top floors red like pōhutukawa in bloom, said Page.
The pōhutukawa was also a sacred symbol of the past, present and future for mana whenua, she said.
The Lockwood-esque wooden interior features are broken up with soft furnishings, carpets and greenery.
Page said they had reused as much furniture and fittings as possible from the other buildings.
The internal staircase at 90 Devonport Rd was designed to encourage connection between people. Photo / Tauranga City Council
An internal wood staircase aimed to encourage connection between people, getting them out of their seats rather than using the elevator, Page said.
“Humans will easily walk up or down one or two flights of stairs, so you really start to see the workplace as a whole building, not just as where you sit on one floor, siloed with your team.
“It’s a tried-and-true method of creating a really vibrant or connected workforce.”
Page said staff had been spread across three buildings, so they wanted to maximise the ability for people to come together.
It also tied into one of the building’s design principles – taura here – binding people so they’re stronger together, she said.
Between 600 and 700 people would work in the building on any given day.
Level five was the “anchor floor” with the kitchen, seating and an events area.
Council Te Pou Ahurea cultural adviser Josh Te Kani and Warren and Mahoney principal architect Asha Page. Photo / Tauranga City Council
The top floor houses the mayor’s office, which has views of Mauao and the Kaimai range.
The smaller deputy mayor’s office next door shared the Mauao view.
Māori design principles
The values used to design the building were developed with mana whenua, Ngāti Tapu and Ngāi Tamarāwaho hapu, said council te pou ahurea cultural adviser Josh Te Kani.
Te Papa houkura and Te Papa manawa whenua, referencing the fertile land and springs of the Te Papa peninsula, were about keeping the environment healthy.