We’re Building the Heart of Surf Lifesaving in Nelson

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For more than 60 years, Nelson Surf Lifesaving Club has protected our community — from beach patrols and flood rescues to Search & Rescue missions across the region.

Now, we’re building a permanent base to bring it all together — a true home for lifesaving, community, and youth.

We’ve raised $3.29 million of $4.9 million. The finish line is in sight — but we need your help to get there.

Why This Matters

Every summer, 3,000 people a day flock to Tāhunanui Beach.
But our work extends far beyond the sand.

  • 6% of all rescues in New Zealand are performed by NSLC.

  • We support Search & Rescue, flood response, and Civil Defence operations across Nelson Tasman.

  • We train and mentor the next generation of lifeguards and leaders.

And we do it all from shipping containers, borrowed sheds, and public toilets.

This project will give our volunteers, youth, and community a true home base to grow from.

What we’re building

We’re almost 70% Funded — Help Us Reach the Finish Line

The foundation is strong — now we need our community to help complete the build.

Every donation, sponsorship, and “Donate a Brick” brings us closer to opening day.

How you can help.

  • Donate-a-Brick

    Nelson Surf Life Saving Club is building a fit-for-purpose home for patrols, rescues, training, and emergency response.
    After 60 years without a real base, we’re close to getting this across the line — and your brick helps finish the job.

  • Make a Donation

    Join a group of community champions whose generosity anchors this once-in-a-lifetime redevelopment project.
    Major Donors will be acknowledged on the Donor Wall, invited to milestone events, and recognised in publications.

  • Become a Sponsor

    Help build Nelson’s new surf lifesaving home and connect your business to a project that protects our community. Naming rights, stair sponsorship, in-kind support, and general sponsorship options are available, with meaningful recognition for partners.

More Than a Building — A Home for Our People

The new clubhouse will:

  • Strengthen emergency response and Search & Rescue operations

  • Train more qualified lifeguards and youth leaders

  • Provide space for community education and safety programmes

  • Create a home base for hundreds of local families

This project is about saving lives — but it’s also about belonging.

 FAQs

  • For more than 60 years, Nelson Surf Life Saving Club has operated without a true home. Volunteers are spread across shipping containers, borrowed rooms, and makeshift sheds. Equipment is scattered, rescues can be delayed, and training the next generation is harder than it should be. We cannot continue to keep people safe with inadequate facilities. The time is now to secure a fit-for-purpose base.

  • This is not an ordinary building — it is lifesaving infrastructure. The design must be durable for coastal conditions, large enough to house critical rescue and search-and-rescue equipment, and safe, modern, and accessible for volunteers, youth, and the wider community.

  • Funding is coming from a combination of sources, including Surf Lifesaving New Zealand, Nelson City Council, community trusts, philanthropic foundations, local businesses, and individual donors. To date, $3.25 million has been secured. The final $1.65 million must be raised through business sponsorships and community fundraising.

  • Delaying comes at a cost. Our volunteers are already working under pressure with inadequate facilities. Retaining and training lifeguards is becoming harder. Nelson is growing, beach visitor numbers are rising, and extreme weather events are more frequent. Waiting means risking lives.

  • Surf lifesaving is about much more than swimmers. Nelson Surf Life Saving Club supports flood rescues, storm events, missing persons, and civil defence emergencies across the wider region. Even if you never swim at Tāhunanui, you, your family, or your community may one day depend on our volunteers.

  • The new clubhouse will improve safety at one of New Zealand’s busiest beaches. It will provide a pathway for young people through Junior Surf, developing confidence, resilience, and skills that last a lifetime. It will be a shared hub for schools, events, and local groups. And it will strengthen Nelson’s disaster-response capability. This is a facility for everyone.

  • Without full funding, the project cannot proceed in its intended form. That would mean continuing to operate out of scattered, inadequate facilities — delaying rescues, limiting training, and weakening our ability to respond to floods and emergencies. Raising the final funds is critical to delivering a safe, modern, effective base.

  • No. This is a community facility. It will serve the thousands of visitors who enjoy Tāhunanui each summer, young people learning lifesaving skills, and the wider Nelson Tasman region through flood response and search and rescue.

  • Yes! The new clubhouse will include a flexible, modern venue space that can seat between 70 and 150 people, depending on configuration. It will feature a commercial-capable kitchen, audio-visual and corporate media facilities, and full accessibility.
    Perfect for corporate or club meetings, workshops, small weddings or receptions, and community gatherings, it will be a welcoming, functional space for the whole region.

  • The location provides essential elevated visibility of the beach and direct access to the water — both critical for patrols and rescues. The design integrates with the natural environment and meets coastal planning requirements. It is carefully planned to balance functionality with respect for the dunes.

  • No. The design is being developed to respect and integrate with the environment. It meets coastal planning requirements and ensures balance between public safety and natural preservation.