Construction and Infrastructure Grants in New Zealand: Funding Community Buildings and Facilities

Community organisations across New Zealand regularly face capital project needs — building repairs, facility upgrades, new construction, accessibility improvements, and equipment. Grant funding for infrastructure and construction is available from government, gaming trusts, and community foundations, but navigating capital grants requires understanding different funders' priorities and the specific requirements of construction-related applications.

Types of community construction and infrastructure funded by grants

Marae development and restoration

Marae are the heart of Māori community life — and many need significant investment:
- Building repair and restoration (meeting houses, dining halls)
- Accessibility upgrades (ramps, accessible toilets)
- Kitchen and sanitation upgrades
- Energy efficiency improvements
- New facilities

Marae development grants are available through Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga, the Ministry for Māori Development (Te Puni Kōkiri), gaming trusts, and community foundations.

Sports and recreation facilities

Community sports facilities — changing rooms, courts, fields, pools — require ongoing capital investment:
- Synthetic turf installations
- Changing room upgrades
- Floodlighting
- Clubhouse renovations
- Indoor court flooring

Sport NZ, local councils, gaming trusts, and community foundations fund sports infrastructure.

Community centres and halls

Community halls, meeting rooms, and multi-purpose facilities:
- Earthquake strengthening
- Renovation and modernisation
- Accessibility upgrades
- Kitchen and amenity improvements
- Energy efficiency (insulation, heating, solar)

Playgrounds and parks

Community playground equipment, park furniture, accessible play equipment, and park development.

Arts and cultural facilities

Gallery spaces, performance venues, cultural centres:
- Acoustic and technical upgrades
- Seating and stage improvements
- Heritage building restoration

Health and social service facilities

Community health centres, social service facilities, disability accommodation:
- Clinical facility upgrades
- Accessible design
- Sensory rooms and quiet spaces
- Waiting area improvements

Key funders for construction and infrastructure

Lotteries Community — Environment and Heritage

Lotteries Environment and Heritage grants fund heritage building restoration and conservation — significant funding for restoring historically significant community buildings.

Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga

Heritage grants for listed heritage buildings and sites, including marae listed on the Heritage Register.

Gaming trusts

Gaming trusts (Pub Charity, Lion Foundation, Grassroots Trust, etc.) regularly fund capital projects:
- Amounts typically $10,000–$50,000 per grant
- Equipment and facility upgrades within this range
- Multiple gaming trust grants combined for larger projects
- Require multiple grant applications over time for large projects

Local councils

Councils fund community facility upgrades through:
- Local board community grants (Auckland)
- Community development grants
- Infrastructure development partnerships
- Sometimes direct capital contribution to community organisations

Foundation North

Foundation North funds significant capital projects in its region — particularly for organisations with strong community track records.

Community foundations

Local community foundations fund local facility development — often smaller amounts but accessible for community-scale projects.

Sport NZ and Regional Sports Trusts

Sport NZ and regional sports trusts (Regional Sports Trust network) fund sports facility development:
- Targeted at sports infrastructure
- Require alignment with sport development priorities
- Often require co-investment from clubs, councils, and other funders

Te Puni Kōkiri

TPK funds marae and Māori community facility development — specific programmes for marae development and Māori community infrastructure.

Ministry for Social Development (MSD)

MSD funds some community organisation infrastructure through the Community Organisation Grants Scheme (COGS) — though primarily operational rather than capital.

Understanding capital project grant applications

Total project cost and funding gap

Capital grants rarely fund 100% of a project. Funders expect co-investment — contribution from the organisation, other funders, or community fundraising. Applications must show:
- Total project cost (with quantity surveyor estimates or builder quotes)
- Confirmed co-funding (other grants, bank loans, fundraising)
- The funding gap this grant fills

Planning and consents

For significant construction, funders want evidence of planning:
- Building consent application or approval
- Resource consent where required
- Heritage consent for heritage buildings
- Architect or designer involvement

Funders don't want to grant to projects that can't proceed due to planning issues.

Ownership and tenure

Funders want assurance the building or facility will remain available for community use:
- Organisation owns the land/building (ideal)
- Long-term lease (typically 20+ years for major capital investment)
- For marae — evidence of governance structure and trustee authority

Maintenance plan

A common failure in capital grant applications is lack of attention to ongoing maintenance. Show that the facility can be maintained after construction — staff, maintenance fund, operating budget.

Community benefit

Articulate clearly who benefits — how many people, from what communities, using the facility in what ways. Funders want to see broad community benefit, not private benefit.

Accessibility

Funders increasingly require that funded facilities are accessible to people with disability. Building consent accessibility requirements are a baseline — demonstrate commitment beyond the minimum.

Phased capital projects

Large capital projects often can't be funded in one grant round. Common approaches:
- Phase the project — complete urgent or highest-priority elements first
- Build a track record with smaller grants before approaching major funders
- Secure planning and consent as a first phase, then seek construction funding
- Multi-year fundraising campaign combining grants, donations, and community fundraising

Relationship with local council

For many community capital projects, the local council is a crucial partner:
- Councils are often landowners of community facilities
- Council co-investment unlocks other funding
- Council endorsement strengthens grant applications
- Council planning processes affect project feasibility

Building a relationship with your local council before applying for capital grants is time well spent.


Tahua's grants management platform supports community organisations and funders managing capital project grant portfolios — with multi-funder tracking, construction milestone management, co-investment documentation, and the tools that help organisations navigate complex capital grant programmes from planning through completion.

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