The view from Little Munro Bay resident Greg Grant's kitchen window. Photo / NZME
The view from Little Munro Bay resident Greg Grant's kitchen window. Photo / NZME
In a bay of bush-clad slopes and quiet coastal homes, a hillside shrine of giant statues has become what locals consider an eyesore.
For years, the unauthorised installation has drawn crowds, complaints, and council scrutiny, but after a long-running battle, the seaside landscape will remain after a compromise wasreached in the Environment Court.
Yanhua Wang, who owns several properties and businesses in Auckland, bought the Little Munro Bay property in Whangārei in 2010.
Native trees backing on to a reserve were felled, and a network of terraces and 146 statues, some as high as 4.5m, was installed.
After multiple complaints to the local council, a commissioner found in 2024 that the scale and placement of the terraces and statues created more than minor adverse landscape and visual effects.
The commissioner also noted that vegetation clearance and the colour choice of the structures added to the council and community’s concerns.
While the commissioner acknowledged Wang’s cultural beliefs, they concluded the proposal failed the gateway tests and consent was refused.
In that decision, the commissioner noted a different outcome could have potential if upper terraces were removed and some statues moved further down the embankment.
The tallest statues at 4.5m sit at the top of the terraces. Photo / NZME
Planners and landscape architects for Wang and the council confirmed the revised proposal now passes the s104D tests and aligns with the District Plan’s outstanding natural landscape (ONL) and Outstanding Natural Coastal Area (ONCA) provisions.
In December, Environment Court Judge Jeff Smith accepted the agreement and issued a consent order under the Resource Management Act.
Smith emphasised the court was not making a merits determination but endorsing an agreement reached by the parties, noting the revised proposal “appears appropriate” and expert input had shaped the conditions.
The agreed plan at the Little Munro Bay Buddhist site. Photo / Environment Court, Sanson and Associates, Simon Cocker landscape architecture
The consent has a 12-month clause in which the council will review conditions if unforeseen landscape or visual effects arise.
Greg Grant lives across the road and has a direct view into the property from his kitchen.
Shannon Pitman is a Whangārei-based reporter for Open Justice covering courts in the Te Tai Tokerau region. She is of Ngāpuhi/ Ngāti Pūkenga descent and has worked in digital media for the past five years. She joined NZME in 2023.