IKEA cagey about opening date for first NZ store this year
Photo:
Supplied
Global furniture giant IKEA is due to open its first New Zealand store in Auckland some time this year, but has not yet told Auckland Council when.
IKEA said it was still on track to open at Sylvia Park and had so far employed 85 of the 500 staff it needed.
Within at least two months of opening, IKEA has to provide the council with an opening date and managment plan, but a council spokesperson confirmed it was still waiting to receive this information.
The consent conditions for the big box retailer required it to submit an plan that detailed how it would manage the anticipated crowds expected to drive there.
"No less than two months prior to the scheduled opening date of the Ikea store, the consent holder must prepare and submit a store opening management plan to Auckland Council for written certification," the consent decision stated.
"The purpose of the plan is to set out the measures to be adopted to manage effects on the transportation network during the first three months following the opening of the store."
IKEA has yet to announce its opening day, but
indicated it would be in time for Christmas
.
The council indicated that, before an official store opening, it wanted Ikea to open online to manage anticipated demand and have a soft opening to test traffic management.
It advised IKEA to avoid opening on public holidays, Fridays, weekends, Black Friday or Boxing Day.
The council asked Ikea to provide details about "incentives to travel to the site by transport modes other than private vehicle, such as bus, train and active modes", as well as "comprehensive information provided to the public on travel routes to and from the store".
Ikea must provide at least 54 bicycle parks and 543 carparks, and submit a travel plan to the council that shows how it would encourage employees and customers to use public transport, walk or cycle to the store.
Construction began on the 34,000 square metre store in 2023 and the iconic blue building is
taking shape at Sylvia Park
.
The ground level will be a carpark, with the store spread across two floors, including its Swedish restaurant that will sell meatballs and hotdogs. The retailer is still recruiting for its anticipated.
IKEA people and culture manager Lauren Clegg said 15,000 people
had applied for advertised roles
by the end of May.
She said 85 people had been employed so far and more roles would be advertised this month, attracting thousands of applicants.
"There does seem to be a lot of people that are between jobs at the moment or struggling to get into work," she said. "I think we're in a really tough time in New Zealand, with the market at the moment, and that's probably contributing to some of our numbers."
Clegg said the IKEA opening had caused excitement.
"We're definitely on track to open late 2025, but the exact opening date is very under wraps for now."
IKEA would continue to release and advertise for roles until November.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
The Panel with Jo McCarroll and Mark Knoff-Thomas Part 1
Tonight on The Panel, Wallace Chapman is joined by panellists Jo McCarroll and Mark Knoff-Thomas. First they discuss the RNZ story by Guyon Espiner about NZ First's relationship to the nicotine industry. They then examine proposed changes to allow more housing on food productive land, and, finally, Finance Minister Nicola Willis says New Zealanders are not getting a raw deal on butter: discuss! To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

RNZ News
3 hours ago
- RNZ News
Morris and James set to close after half a century of pottery sales
Morris and James' designs are well known for their bold colours and distinctive designs. Photo: Supplied An iconic Matakana ceramics business has made the decision to close its doors after 47 years. For nearly five decades, Morris and James pottery has graced gardens and living rooms across the country, all made on site in its north Auckland base of Matakana. But the business is set to close, citing the current economic crisis as a major factor. Founded in 1977 by Anthony Morris and Sue James, the designs are well known for their bold colours and distinctive designs. Kieran Rice is among those who bought the business in 2009, and is the managing director at Morris and James Matakana. He told Checkpoint the decision was a difficult one for both staff and customers. "It was very, very hard and quite sad... it was a very difficult day when we talked to the staff about it." He said the support from the community had poured in today, following the announcement they were set to close. "People are supportive. We've got great customers and and great staff and they sort of understand the situation, and say we've been a cornerstone of the Matakana tourism for a long time." Rice said that he had never experienced tougher times when operating a business, with spending down for most shoppers. "It's definitely been difficult and these are discretionary spends so you know people have priorities. "People still support us and buy our stuff. But it's just that little bit harder than it had has been in the past." Morris and James Pottery will be closing its doors after 47 years. Photo: Supplied A number of reasons had contributed to the decision to close. Rice said these included a lack of spending, increasing costs and a need to update equipment. "We're at the stage now where we need to start thinking about investing in new kilns or upgrading kilns... and those are big investment decisions with long paybacks. "So some of those things also have been difficult decisions for us to go one way or the other." There is not yet a closure date for the business, with the team wanting to use up the remaining clay before closing the doors. "We're carrying on making for probably another two months and probably manufacturing for another three months by the time we're finished glazing." In that time, he hoped an investor may pop up to potentially save the business. "We're crossing our fingers a bit too... [that] an angel investor might turn up that wants to buy things." Rice said the business will vacate their current premises once they close the doors, and the owners hope to open it up as a space for creatives. Before the closure, the team is focusing on creating orders, and are making special items for customers who request it. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
3 hours ago
- RNZ News
Fonterra boss meets with politicians over high butter prices
Fonterra's boss has given media the silent treatment over the sky high price of butter. Both National and Labour's finance spokespeople met with Fonterra's chief executive Miles Hurrell last night, trying to find out why the cost of a block is so steep. But whether the debate leads to a price correction or just more froth and churn from lawmakers is yet to be seen. Russell Palmer reports.