top of page

  What we do  

Creating change that matters and will last

We work with our clients to build vibrant communities, develop strong teams, gain profound insights and make well-informed decisions. Each project is approached with a bespoke strategy, based on proven methods, guided by our core values.


See some of our recent work below:

Focus on Community Engagement

Strengthening Auckland Communities

Community engagement, project management,
research and workshopping

 

Together with a group of community organisations committed to sustaining and enhancing communities, we facilitated a research and engagement process to find out what ‘good’ looks like and how we might get there in terms of strong communities in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland. This work generated over 250 responses to online surveys, in-person interviews and written submissions, and included two in-person hui run and coordinated by Catalyse. In conjunction with Walk Together, this process established clear priorities for action and built new alliances. A steering group has now been formed to bring these priorities into being. ​

PXL_20231205_021537521.jpg
StCo_Hui_1 (1).jpg

Kororāreka

Community engagement, workshopping and placemaking

Working with local people and the Far North District Council, Catalyse was invited to the Kororāreka community to support local placemaking in the waterfront area. We helped organise and run a pop-up shop to gather ‘big ideas’  to improve an iconic and  well-loved place. Over 1300 ideas were collected! These ideas were refined in a weekend activation that began to develop a cohesive plan. We used our community heart pulse resource to find out more about those who participated in the weekend and painted a fabulous footpath game for people to have an example of a playful ‘small change’ activation to enjoy until it washes away.

PXL_20240615_232921266_edited.jpg

Tagalad Reserve Community Engagement

Community engagement, event organising and delivery

After being behind locked gates for several years, Tagalad Reserve was deemed suitable for selling for development  by Auckland Council. Catalyse was asked by Ōrakei Local Board to work with the community and Mission Bay Kohimarama Residents Association, to develop a local campaign and open day to stop this sale. The open day offered a tour of the facility, opportunity to talk with elected members, and used our Ideas Board tool, footpath games and stencilled inspiration created by visitors to share ideas for more community focused development. This information, along with collective community action, successfully saved the reserve from being sold a few years later, and we were very happy to organise another open day to celebrate! This time we trialled a few of the ideas shared a couple of years before. There was music, some GeoLingo, a tuatara hopscotch, donuts and coffee as we also gathered thoughts to inform how the facility might be managed as a community asset.

Copy of dji_export_1652499296171.jpg
38-469696.jpg

Focus on Project Management

The Kūmara Awards
Project management, event delivery
 

The Kūmara Awards showcases and celebrates fabulous placemaking in several locations across Aotearoa. Co-created with Placemaking Aotearoa, the awards have been designed and run by Catalyse since 2020. We have developed processes for nominating, judging and celebrating placemaking projects - and the remarkable individuals and communities who make them happen - that infuse our public spaces with life. Each year,  more projects are nominated and we are delighted to hear that the Kūmara Awards  encourage even more people to actively contribute to the places where they live, work, and play.

kumara-awards-2022- (2).jpg
image (22).png
image (13)_edited_edited.jpg

Youthline Leadership Connect

Project management, co-design, facilitation

Catalyse project managed the development of a pilot well-being program for youth with Youthline.  Using co-design and peer review processes, we customised our adaptive planning tool and created supporting resources to enhance students' leadership skills and understanding of well-being. This approach and the resulting project empowered rangatahi in five Tāmaki Makaurau schools to participate in leadership, mental health, and strength-building opportunities and the results have informed the implementation of the program in schools around the motu.

IMG_3658.HEIC

Darwin Conference

IACD International Association for Community Development
Project management and conference organisation

Catalyse helped plan and deliver the IACD World Community Development Conference ‘From the Edge’ 2023  in Darwin. With a focus on indigenous peoples and knowledge, we were an active participant in the planning committee: drafting communications materials, guiding principles, sponsorship documents and designing the logo. We also facilitated the inclusion of two indigenous keynote speakers from Aotearoa, convened a series of conversations to help resource Kiwis to get to the conference, moderated sessions and delivered two events at the conference (Story Slam and Geolingo). For three days, over 650 people from all over the world shared experiences and knowledge in traditional conference events as well as yarning circles, collective art and storytelling. Many connections were made and continue to grow!

Focus on Research and Strategy

Community Strategic Plans 

Strategic planning and community engagement

At the request of Timaru District Council, Catalyse worked with the Community Boards in Geraldine and Pleasant Point to deliver strategic plans and first-year work plans. The work used a range of creative community engagement tools, including our ideas board, online and postcard surveys, and happened in places as varied as local pubs, cafes, markets, theatres, libraries, rural halls and schools. The strategies and plans were both grounded in and refined by conversations with Mana Whenua, community leaders, and the public including primary and secondary school pupils. It was a real pleasure to bring this work to the places people already gather in and help surface ideas from locals who do not usually engage in such work. 

PP Market Easter Monday_edited_edited.jpg
Geraldine library.jpg

St John's Feasibility Study

Research and reporting

St. John's Presbyterian Church in Mt. Roskill hired Catalyse to conduct a feasibility study for a new community centre on their current site. We used postcard surveying in libraries, community centres and outside shopping centres to engage a wide range of locals and encourage them to tell us more in a longer online survey. This information was complemented by desktop research, statistics and mapping to provide a comprehensive report that documented not only what people would like but showing how feasible and viable such a facility is likely to be too.

370964292_695578729281890_4722281792339074198_n.jpg

Harae Mai and Welcome

Evaluation, project support and playbook development

Catalyse joined this community initiative to welcome new residents after it had already been prototyped in Glen Eden. The project provides resources to help those new to the area ‘find their feet’ in their new neighbourhood. The resources are decided on by a group of locals and gathered or created locally. We worked with Innovation Unit, Kāinga Ora and Roskill Together to support Haere Mai and Welcome in Roskill by collating and analysing information from workshops as it emerged and feeding it into the design process. We also designed some easy-to-use evaluation tools and undertook a range of interviews to assess the process. Along with information already gathered in Glen Eden, this information was used to create a playbook for other communities to use, should they wish to develop Haere Mai and Welcome in their place. This playbook is now being used in Oranga and we are working alongside those delivering it there too.

Haere Mai & Welcome - Playbook (DRAFT v4 - Dec 2023).jpg

We also develop custom tools for our projects!

Our tools and resources are an essential part of Catalyse work process. Standing on the shoulders of many, we often design and adapt tools for specific projects, so we get what is needed in the most appropriate way.

Kainga Ora Impact Stories

Research, assessment and tool development
 

Two of our tools were developed when Catalyse was commissioned by Powerdigm to collaborate with Kainga Ora to gather stories about the impacts of two community hubs. Together, these tools helped people who shared a community space (but didn’t always know one another) get to know one another better, stimulate conversation, prompt all sorts of reflections and questions as well as help facilitate an initial analysis on how well the hubs had worked.

This process means those contributing data also have a chance to contribute to making meaning of that data and the visual tools we've created make the gathering and analytical processes easier and accessible.

 

We have successfully adapted both of these tools for other contexts and purposes since and they continue to reveal all kinds of things! 

IMG_20230606_165339_edited.jpg
IMG_20230606_171804_edited.jpg

Focus on Placemaking

IMG_20230306_143858.jpg
IMG_20230206_145014.jpg

Hibiscus Coast Placemaking

Placemaking through play.

​When the Hibiscus and Bays Local Board decided to invest in encouraging more play in their rohe, they were not thinking of dedicated playgrounds but of opportunities for play in all kinds of places. Catalyse was asked to work with local communities to help locals develop playful activities that mattered to them, cultivating community connections along the way. With 10 projects to deliver across the area in a 9 month period, we partnered with a wide range of local groups and organisations to deliver playful placemaking as diverse as a cupboard of games designed by adolescents for adolescents, a series of footpath games with an accompanying guide book and GeoLingo - a way of sharing language and feeling more at home in a place. 

Mairangi Bay Placemaking

Locally-led placemaking facilitation and support.

Building on previous efforts led by Auckland Council and the Hibiscus and Bays Local Board, our role in this initiative was to support local residents to co-create meaningful placemaking. First, we facilitated a collaborative mid-winter/Matariki co-design workshop with community members. This session revealed a diverse array of placemaking ideas and identified three priority projects. Using a divergence-emergence-convergence framework to guide us in our role as enabler, these ideas were all integrated into a cohesive map, collaboratively developed and designed with input from the community.

Screenshot-6-600x429.png
20220705082648_IMG_4238_edited.jpg

Takapuna Pavement Placemaking

Community-driven placemaking facilitation and support

When local people expressed distaste for blocks of colour painted temporarily on footpaths in Takapuna, we asked them what they would like instead and, using chalk, they told us! With the support of Eke Panuku, people young and old, from all kinds of backgrounds and with many different experiences of ‘art’ shared ideas in a pavement art workshop that were then developed by a smaller group of locals with the help of two professional artists, Kingi Gilbert and Paris Kirby. With Catalyse’s facilitation and support, the group engaged with Ngāti Pāoa as Mana Whenua, navigated rules and regulations, and sourced materials to co-design several art pieces. One of these artworks, referencing key local features and stories, was installed for 8 months and will inform permanent works in the future.

330994218_6028946597164801_1246688319358
IMG_3278_edited.jpg
330524604_762136451589489_51324915495883
Takapuna Art.png
bottom of page