Waikato Times

Waharoa business sites well placed

- Kashka.tunstall@waikatotim­es.co.nz

Former pasture is central to key distributi­on routes, writes Kashka Tunstall A new commercial and industrial park is advertisin­g space on the outskirts of Matamata.

The Waharoa Business Park is a 19-hectare block of light-industrial zoned land in the rural Waharoa community.

Owned by four private investors, the land has been used as farming pasture for the past 10 years.

Craig Mowatt, one of the investors and current site manager, says he believes the park is the last major industrial space available in eastern Waikato.

The area’s links to other major centres have led to other properties being quickly snapped up.

‘‘It’s a key distributi­on centre. It’s central to a huge population,’’ Mowatt said.

The park is adjacent to State Highway 27, with 3 million vehicles passing by the site annually, and has access to the East Coast Main Trunk Railway.

The strength of the park is its potential as a site for both warehousin­g and distributi­ng, according to Mowatt.

The Waharoa Business Park is adjacent to State Highway 27.

Rotorua, Hamilton and Tauranga are all 50-minute drives, while South Auckland is just over an hour away.

Mowatt says the investor group believes business confidence is increasing and the property market is in good shape.

The park will be built in stages. Seven titled commercial and industrial sections have already been made available in the first stage.

Those sites measure between 3000 and 8000 square metres.

The sections are zoned for light industrial, storage and manufactur­ing.

The council is currently planning to zone the subdivisio­n as full industrial, in an effort to support industry in the community, Mowatt says.

One site in stage one has already been sold to accommodat­e dairying technology.

The second stage will have about 10 more sections for sale between 6000sqm and 4 hectares, but that will most likely change, because clients may call for tailored lot sizes, Mowatt says.

The owners, who are self-marketing the property, have said they will consider all offers, from outright title sales to designing and purpose-building for clients.

There has been interest in the sites in stage two, but no commitment­s have yet been made, he says.

Mowatt does not want to put pricing indication­s around the property.

Instead, the investment group is calling for expression­s of interest and the prices will be negotiable.

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