Splash pad opened

Gore Mayor Ben Bell (front) and Gore District councillor Neville Phillips have a bit of fun at...
Gore Mayor Ben Bell (front) and Gore District councillor Neville Phillips have a bit of fun at the new splash pad after its official opening. Watching the fun are (back from left) Gore District Councillor Rob McKenzie, Mataura Community Board member Laurel Turnbull and Mataura Community Board chairwoman Nicky Coats. PHOTO: JACKIE TAV PHOTOGRAPHY
The Mataura Splash Pad opened up its floodgates on Saturday, with the long-awaited project now available for the district to enjoy.

The splash pad, which is the second stage of the Tulloch Park redevelopment project, is another addition to the town following the successful basketball courts and pump track, installed last year.

Children and adults alike from Mataura flocked to Tulloch Park to enjoy the splash pad, with nozzles and fountains showering and spraying water down.

Gore District Mayor Ben Bell even got involved after introducing the project.

"Long time coming, but we’re here now," he said.

"It’s super cool for this community, the amount of kids who have come along today has been fantastic, a lot of community support."

All the water used for the splash pad is recycled in its own system, being cleaned and filtered before popping back out, outside of the main water system in Gore.

Mr Bell said it was a remarkable project especially considering how it was funded.

Mataura Community Board chairwoman Nicky Coats said she was over the moon to see the pad alive and well.

"It’s fantastic to see it opened and completed. The proof is in the pudding, seeing all the kids out there enjoying it," she said.

Ms Coats said the pad represented a lot of work for the community board to reinvigorate parts of Mataura which may have been neglected for some years.

"It’s such a good feeling. We stood in the old pool two and a-half years ago, and seen what had happened after the floods, the vandalism and the neglect.

"This is what Mataura is all about. You put something on, they’ll turn out."

The total cost to complete the project was $1,128,305. Of this, $1,017,978 has been secured from external funders, and $70,000 is carryover funding from the stage one development.

There is still an unfunded balance portion of $40,326.84. External funding includes $500,000 from the Three Waters Better Off funding and $200,000 from the Tourism Infrastructure Fund.

gerrit.doppenberg@odt.co.nz