Community Anchors and Place-Based Grants in New Zealand

Every thriving community has anchors — trusted organisations deeply embedded in place that know their people, hold relationships over years and decades, and provide the connective tissue of community life. Community centres, neighbourhood houses, community hubs, marae, Pacific community halls, and similar organisations serve as anchors for their neighbourhoods. Grant funding supports these anchors to fulfil their role as places of gathering, service, and community development.

What community anchors do

Community anchor organisations are defined by their relationship to place:
- They are of the community, not just in the community
- They hold long-term relationships with residents, often across generations
- They provide services but also create community — the relationship is the product
- They are trusted by community members who distrust external organisations
- They respond to emerging community needs quickly

Functions of community anchors

  • Meeting space for community groups and activities
  • Service hub (hosting visiting services, coordinating referrals)
  • Employment and volunteer opportunities for local people
  • Emergency response coordination (floods, earthquakes, pandemics)
  • Social connection and reducing isolation
  • Cultural expression and community identity
  • Space for celebration (weddings, funerals, birthdays, tangihanga)
  • Advocacy and voice for local needs

Types of community anchors in New Zealand

Community centres

Generalist community facilities serving a geographic area:
- Meeting rooms and halls for hire
- Programme delivery (classes, groups, activities)
- Social services coordination
- Open spaces for informal gathering

Neighbourhood houses

Neighbourhood houses are a specific model — warm, welcoming spaces with a drop-in culture:
- Open door policy (anyone can come)
- Low-barrier, no-appointment access
- Strong volunteer culture
- Community-led programming
- Often in lower-income communities

Marae

Marae are the anchors of iwi and hapū communities:
- Physical buildings (wharenui, wharekai, ātea)
- Cultural, spiritual, and social functions
- Tangihanga (funerals) as central function
- Governance by whānau and community
- Range from well-resourced to struggling

Pacific community halls

Pacific churches and community centres serve as anchors for Pacific communities:
- Church hall functions (worship, community, events)
- Language and cultural preservation
- Pacific community connection and support
- Migration and settlement support

Multicultural community centres

For communities maintaining cultural identity:
- Ethnic community organisations
- Cultural centres (Chinese, Korean, Indian, Samoan, and others)
- Language schools and cultural events

Key funders for community anchors

Lotteries Community

Lotteries is a primary funder of community anchors:
- Community facilities grants (building, equipment, refurbishment)
- Programme grants for services and activities
- Community development grants

Gaming trusts

Gaming trusts fund community anchor activities:
- Facility costs (cleaning, insurance, maintenance)
- Programme delivery
- Equipment

Local councils

Councils are major supporters of community anchors:
- Council-owned buildings (leased to community organisations at peppercorn rents)
- Community grants
- Community Board grants (in Auckland and other councils)
- Partnerships and service agreements

Foundation North

Foundation North (Auckland and Northland) funds community development including community anchors.

Community foundations

Regional community foundations fund local community centres and neighbourhood houses.

Government

  • MSD community funding
  • Te Puni Kōkiri (marae development)
  • Ministry for Pacific Peoples (Pacific community organisations)
  • Multicultural New Zealand (ethnic community organisations)

Marae development funding

Marae have specific capital needs and specific funding pathways:

Te Puni Kōkiri Marae Development Fund

TPK funds marae infrastructure:
- Building repairs and maintenance
- New facilities
- Accessibility improvements
- Environmental upgrades (insulation, solar)

Community funders

  • Lotteries Community (marae facilities)
  • Gaming trusts (marae programmes)
  • Regional councils

Crown agencies

  • Kāinga Ora (marae housing in some cases)
  • Ministry of Education (kura kaupapa on marae)

Community-led development

Community anchors are increasingly seen as partners in community-led development:

What community-led development looks like

  • Community identifies priorities, not external funders
  • Community-owned and governed solutions
  • Long-term relationship and trust-building before change
  • Respecting community agency and wisdom
  • Community leads evaluation and learning

Funders adopting community-led approaches

Some funders are shifting to community-led development models:
- Participatory grantmaking (community members decide grants)
- Trust-based philanthropy (multi-year, unrestricted grants to anchors)
- Lived experience leadership in grant decisions
- Longer relationships with anchor organisations

Grant application considerations

Community trust as evidence

Community anchors' most important asset is community trust — built over years or decades. Show evidence of this trust: attendance patterns, length of relationships, community testimony, emergency response (communities go to trusted anchors first in crisis).

Meeting space value

Meeting space may seem basic — but the combination of accessible, trusted, warm space and community relationships creates the conditions for other programmes. Funders often undervalue space and relationships relative to programmes.

Volunteer culture

Community anchors thrive on volunteer engagement — quantify volunteer hours contributed and what this represents as in-kind investment. Volunteer communities are self-reinforcing; they're evidence of anchor strength.

Unmet need as access

Community anchors often don't chase funding — community comes to them. Show how this organic demand reflects unmet need in the community.

Core costs

Anchor organisations' core costs (coordinator, building, utilities) are often their biggest funding challenge — funders prefer projects over operations. Make a compelling case for operational funding as the foundation of community benefit.


Tahua's grants management platform supports place-based funders and community anchor organisations — with programme tracking, community reach data, volunteer management, and the tools that help community development funders demonstrate the value of investment in New Zealand's community infrastructure.

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