Council Votes On New Aquatic Network Plan
Tauranga City’s Mayor and Councillors have voted to support the development of a 50-metre outdoor training pool at Mount Maunganui College and to keep the Ōtūmoetai Swimming Pool up and running.
At this week’s Annual Plan 2025/26 deliberations, the Council was presented with three key options as part of a draft Aquatics Network Plan, which will outline a roadmap for aquatic facilities in Tauranga.
The Council was told site investigations are underway to inform the next step for the Memorial Park Aquatic project. If found to be favourable, a design review will ensure the project has the right scope, design and cost to deliver value for money for the community.
Tauranga Mayor Mahé Drysdale says a community survey undertaken at the end of 2024 showed 73% of respondents supported additional aquatic facilities with an indoor 50-metre lane pool ranking the second highest feature in the feedback.
He says the initial Memorial Park Aquatic Centre proposal, which had an original budget of $124 million, was inherited from the Commission but he is keen to get a better financial outcome.
“We’re committed to delivering value for money, so it’s on us to understand what our community wants and consider what cost savings could be possible,” Mahé says.
“I applaud the Mount Maunganui Aquatic Centre Trust for bringing us the 50-metre pool option. It ticks a lot of boxes, and we would provide an Olympic-size pool for Tauranga in the shortest possible timeframe. From a Council perspective, it’s probably the most economical pool we could ever build.”
The Council is supportive of the 50-metre pool proposal but will continue to work with the Trust and undertake due diligence before releasing the funding.
Deputy Mayor Jen Scoular says the Aquatic Network Plan is looking at the bigger picture for Tauranga and delivering what the people of Tauranga have said they want.
“This supports a healthy Tauranga. We want kids learning to swim and being safe in the water. We want them having fun and we’ve now got some great options on the table.”
The Aquatics Network Plan will now be drafted and go back to the Council for endorsement before going out for community consultation.
Council Recommendations:
Memorial Park
Aquatic Centre
(c) Notes
that the site investigations currently underway for the
existing Memorial Pool site (including geotechnical) will be
available in early August 2025. If the results are
favourable, this could present an opportunity to locate the
new Memorial Aquatics Centre on that site and to retain the
Queen Elizabeth Youth Centre for circa 15
years.
Ōtūmoetai
Pool
(d) Supports the
Ōtūmoetai Pool Working Group’s recommendations to retain
and upgrade the Ōtūmoetai Pool and signals its intent to
allocate indicative capital funding of $3.28m (uninflated)
in 2027/28 and $2.43m (uninflated) in 2032/33 through the
next Long-Term Plan in line with those
recommendations.
(e) Notes that
if the Ōtūmoetai Pool is retained in the network the
Development Contributions Policy will need to be amended to
reflect the implications of that decision.
Mount
Maunganui College 50-metre
pool
(f) Confirms
in-principle support for the Mount Maunganui College 50m
Pool expansion proposal, including ongoing Council support
to subsidise the community use of the pool,
with:
(i) a $4.945m initial
10-year loan-funded operational grant for the pool
construction, paid to the Mount Maunganui Aquatic Centre
Trust over 2025/26 (2.59m) and 2026/27 ($2.355m),
and
(ii) up to $340,000
annual operational grant, based on actual net operational
costs, on an ongoing basis to meet the extra cost of
providing a 50m community pool,
as outlined in the Mount
Maunganui Aquatic Centre Trust proposal (attachment 4).
Subject to: Annual Plan decisions and their impacts on the
balanced budget financial benchmark, formal support for the
proposal from Ministry of Education and Mount Maunganui
College Board of Trustees, and the outcomes of resolution
(g).
(g) Instructs staff to
continue further due diligence and financial modelling, and
to work with the Mount Maunganui Aquatic Centre Trust to
finalise a funding agreement that
provides:
(i) the legal and
financial framework for the upgrade and ongoing operation of
a new 50m pool,
(ii)
long-term confidence to the Mount Maunganui Aquatic Centre
Trust and the Council regarding the financial sustainability
of the proposal, and
(iii) fair,
equitable and safe community use of the pool, including
non-structured community open
use.
(h) If resolution (f) and
(g) are not successfully implemented, signal in-principle
support for option 2, 33m pool expansion to a wider 33m x
25m pool in 2025/26 and 2026/27
approving:
(i) an initial
10-year loan-funded operational grant of $2.6 mil for
construction, and
(ii) an
ongoing operational grant of up to $20,000 to cover the
additional cost of meeting PoolSafe requirements,
as the
alternative preferred option. Subject to Annual Plan
decisions and their impacts on the balanced budget financial
benchmark and formal support for the proposal from Ministry
of Education and Mount Maunganui College Board of
Trustees.
Aquatic Network
Plan
(i) Approves
the development of an Aquatics Network Plan, as outlined in
this report, including targeted stakeholder engagement and
broader community
consultation.
(j) Notes
that, subject to the above resolutions, staff will prepare
an Aquatic Network Plan that outlines a roadmap for the
future of aquatics in Tauranga,
including:
(i) An aquatic
centre at Memorial
Park,
(ii) Retention of
Ōtūmoetai Pool for at least 15 years,
and
(iii) Support for the
development of a 50m training pool at Mount Maunganui
College.