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KŌKŌHĪNAU PAPAKĀINGA Trust Invests in Solar for Housing

In the Whakatane region of the Eastern Bay of Plenty, Kōkōhīnau Papakāinga Trust is building a mixed housing community development for kaumatua (elders) and whānau (families), with shared facilities, wraparound services and connection with the Kōkōhīnau marae next door.

 

COMMUNITY LIVING

In total, the new development will be made up of 34 houses – a mix of 2-bedroom and 3-4 bedroom homes. Five houses have already been completed in stage one. These were built to house whānau whose houses had suffered irreparable damages after Cyclone Debra flooded the town of Edgecumbe in 2017.

The next stage will see a further 14 houses built, with facilities and essential services for tenants as well as for whānau, hapū, marae, iwi, and community. These services will include medical support, counselling, health promotion, fitness and mobility, budget advice, and marae-based programmes. The Trust has also set aside an area of land that will become a ‘maara kai’ – a space for tenants to grow their own plants and vegetables.

In the final stage, there will be land available with the capacity for a further 15 homes, which will be built for whānau on a ‘lease to own’ or ‘first home ownership’ saving programme, making it easier for people to access affordable, healthy homes.

POWERED BY THE SUN

The homes are all kitted out with energy efficient heat pumps and solar panels. The solar system includes solar PV, batteries, and a shared electricity grid. Each home would be capable of generating 35 kilowatts of electricity a day through the panels, and any power not used would be stored in the batteries and shared either to the grid or to future homes built in the development.

The solar panels were installed with support from the Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment’s Māori Housing Renewable Energy Fund and will make a big difference to the comfort and living costs of residents.

Because the area is prone to flooding and earthquakes – like the 6.5 magnitude earthquake that rocked the area in 1987 and left many families homeless – the Trust has used new building technology that fixes houses on stainless steel piles which provide height and also enable flexible movement to counteract earthquakes. The houses are 1.5 metres off the ground which means they’re also well above flooding level.

CONNECTION TO WHENUA

Papakāinga often describes a housing community with an ancestral connection to the land, and that’s very important to the work of the Trust, says Hemana.

As we are the Kaitiaki or Guardians of the whenua, our purpose is to ensure that the land we have is preserved, protected, developed and enhanced for the benefit of future generations,” says Hemana. “We want to provide the present generation with the opportunity to reconnect to their land, reconnect to families, and reconnect to their marae.

That connection to the marae is an important aspect of the new development. The hapū or sub-tribe of Kōkōhīnau Te Pahipoto, like other hapū in the area, are descendants of the original guardians of the land. For the Trust, it’s vital to maintain the mana or status of the whenua by preserving and protecting their taonga.

 


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