“We’re committed to creating places that feel welcoming, supportive and genuinely connected to the communities they serve,” Sanchez said.
The development will be connected by cycleways and walkways, which Bupa said was to support an active and inclusive neighbourhood.
Bupa and Alvarium believed the development will contribute to a multi-generational neighbourhood with shared amenities and a strong sense of connection.
“The Bupa development will sit naturally alongside our residential stages, creating complementary amenities that lift the whole development, provide more healthcare and support options for residents, and increase confidence in the area for potential purchasers,” Shane Scott, head of real estate at Alvarium Investments, said.
“This investment reinforces the vision for Mangawhai Central as a connected, liveable community, and brings real social and economic value to the town.”
Community group Mangawhai Matters, which promotes sustainable development and supports local initiatives, was comfortable with the acquisition.
Chairman Doug Lloyd said a retirement village was always planned for the Mangawhai Central development.
He flagged potential strains on infrastructure, such as water supply and roading, especially as Metlifecare was well into construction on Mangawhai’s first retirement village.
The debut village includes 160 single‑level villas expected to be completed later this year, and a 45‑bed hospital‑level care home. The full build is scheduled to finish 2029.
Lloyd said Mangawhai’s “creaking” infrastructure would be put under pressure, especially the “B-grade” roads in and out of town, and beach access.
“There is no water supply in Mangawhai and no plans for reticulated water in the near future. I am not sure how a retirement village would handle this issue.”
Kaipara District Council (KDC) was confident the consent process would catch any issues related to infrastructure.
KDC’s general manager of planning and development, Michael Day, said the impacts on roads, water, wastewater and stormwater would be assessed through the resource consent process and appropriate provision for infrastructure made, if granted.
He explained that new developments pay their share toward infrastructure upgrades.
“Council operates on the premise that growth should fund growth – this is why we charge/levy development contributions.
“This ensures development makes an appropriate contribution to the costs of providing new or upgraded infrastructure to serve growth.”
Day said Bupa and Alvarium’s development was generally consistent with the council’s district planning, “although the proposal will be subject to a resource consent application to ensure good design outcomes and the appropriate provision of infrastructure”.