From July 1, it will cost less to use the parking buildings in Tauranga city centre, making them a more affordable and convenient parking option.
Elizabeth Street and Spring Street parking buildings will be free from 5pm – 6am on weekdays and remain free all weekend and on public holidays.
The hourly weekday rates will also drop to $2 an hour for the first 2 hours and a maximum of $2.50 for each additional hour, making parking for over 2hrs cheaper than on-street.
The building rate change is being introduced following consistent availability in the parking buildings, which have only been reaching 65 per cent - 75 per cent capacity at the busiest times.
Speaking about the reduced rates, Tauranga City Council parking manager Reece Wilkinson says introducing free evening parking and free weekend parking is unusual for a big city, council hopes it will encourage more people to come into the city centre, try out the parking buildings, and support local businesses in the process.
“Our data shows even at peak times the parking buildings at Elizabeth Street and Spring Street are not operating near capacity.
“We hope reducing the hourly rates in the parking buildings will encourage more people to use them as a convenient, low-cost parking option in the city centre.
“Now if you’re out for a shop or long lunch, parking for over 2hrs will be significantly cheaper in the buildings than on-street parking.”
To help make the parking buildings a more inviting place to park, they are also getting a spruce up with colourful stairwells, better wayfinding signage, additional lighting, easier pedestrian access, and more CCTV cameras.
The parking building upgrades follow additional changes in city centre parking over the past year, including the introduction of city-wide free parking all weekend, a change to lease structures to free up more car parks for the wider community, and the installation of electronic parking signs at the main entrances to the city.
These changes are all part of a move to make finding a car park easier in the city centre.
“We know sometimes it might not feel like it, but there are more parking spaces in the city centre now than in June 2023, with more than 300 additional car parks coming later this year.
“Our data shows that even at peak times there are consistently vacant spaces in the city centre and it’s important that as our city centre continues to develop people know where the available parking spaces are.”
Parking options in Tauranga city centre and cost (from July 1, 2024):
Spring Street parking building – 321 all day spaces
- $2 an hour for the first two hours, maximum of $2.50 for each additional hour
- Free 5pm – 6am on weekdays
- Free all weekend and on public holidays
Elizabeth Street parking building – 526 all day spaces
- $2 an hour for the first two hours, maximum of $2.50 for each additional hour
- Free 5pm – 6am on weekdays
- Free all weekend and on public holidays
On-street – Over 1,000 spaces (various time limits apply)
- $2 an hour for the first two hours, $5 per additional hour
- Free after 5pm on weekdays and free all weekend
Dive Crescent – 150 all day spaces
- Maximum daily charge $8
- Free after 5pm on weekdays and free all weekend
TV3, Wharf Street – 45 all day spaces
- Maximum daily charge $12.50
- Free after 5pm on weekdays and free all weekend
Cliff Road – 166 all day spaces
- Maximum daily charge $6.50
- Free after 5pm on weekdays and free all weekend
New car parking coming in 2024
- The new off-street Devonport Road car park will open later this year and include over 100 car parks and sheltered bike parking
- The Hamilton Street car park will open late 2024 and will include at least 200 public car parks
All city centre parking will remain free on weekends and public holidays. On-street time restrictions still apply from 8am-6pm Monday to Sunday.
For more information on city centre parking and fees click here.
5 comments
Too late
Posted on 27-06-2024 09:44 | By Fernhill22
I avoid downtown like the plague; I can't remember the last time I went there. With all the road works & closed roads over the past few years, plus traffic congestion and a lack of parking options why would you want to bother going there. Downtown Tauranga has died a very slow death because of how TCC have managed things and not listening to the people. The number of shops & businesses that have closed over the past few years makes the CBD look like a ghost town. Now after the fiasco you created, you are trying to get people back into town reducing the parking fees. It's too little too late, the horse has already bolted and I for one certainly won't be coming back. And just for clarity, the $300m spend on the Civic Precinct won't change anything for anyone other than creating allot of debt.
really?
Posted on 27-06-2024 10:08 | By KiwiDerek
So let me get this right - you (Fernhill22) are so offended by the closing of CBD businesses and your inability to find a park in the CBD that in response you will never be going there again, irrespective of what happens in the future. Good mature response that, bro.
Oh ha ha!
Posted on 27-06-2024 10:23 | By nerak
Agree wholeheartedly with Fernhill22. Way too late, grasping straw much. Fools the lot of them at TCC. The damage they have created by wowzing 4 people much of the town has come to despise will take years to undo and much will never be righted, while those 4 swan off our radar with pockets stuffed with our money and a town many locals no longer visit.
@ Fernhill22
Posted on 27-06-2024 10:29 | By Yadick
As usual a good comment from you.
I personally won't say "never" to going back into town but at this stage very, very rarely.
Why go to the CBD
Posted on 27-06-2024 11:12 | By BAATS
I would like Reece to explain why anyone would go into the supposed CBD - it is apart from some employement closed.
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