Top storiesNew ZealandPoliticsBusinessEntertainmentSportsWorld

Idea could lead to Taranaki hosting world's highest bungee jump

Friday, 30 November 2018

A company in New Plymouth is proposing to bring the world
A company in New Plymouth is proposing to bring the world's highest bungee jump to Taranaki. It would be 400m and from a specially tethered helium balloon. This mock-up shows the approximate height of such a venture.

When Tim Hawkey pitched the idea to bring the world's highest bungee jump to Taranaki, it was just because he wanted a cheap thrill close by. 

CloudJump is the 400m high bungee jump idea that won Hawkey, along with team mates Aaron Johnson, Eli Lamb, Eilish Baine, Nick Zenoi, and Naomi Kutner, first place at a recent startup business competition in New Plymouth.

Tim Hawkey, 27, Eli Lamb, 20, Aaron Johnson, 26, and Eilish Baine, 22, won the Taranaki Tourism Startup Weekend with their CloudJump bungee idea.
Tim Hawkey, 27, Eli Lamb, 20, Aaron Johnson, 26, and Eilish Baine, 22, won the Taranaki Tourism Startup Weekend with their CloudJump bungee idea.

The highest bungee jump in the world is currently 260m high in Zhangjiajie, China. At 400m CloudJump would be 72m taller than Auckland's Sky Tower and more than twice the height of New Plymouth's mothballed power station chimney.  

CloudJump's point of difference is not only its height, but that the bungee jump would be tethered from a helium balloon. 

If it was to go ahead it could conceivably see people bungee jumping through clouds.
If it was to go ahead it could conceivably see people bungee jumping through clouds.

**READ MORE:

* Halsey freaked out by Sky Tower bungee jump

This mock up shows that cables would be used to keep the platform stationary.
This mock up shows that cables would be used to keep the platform stationary.

* New Plymouth boy builds model of Auckland Sky Tower using Lego

* China to open world's highest and longest glass bridge**

'There's balloon systems all around the world now and cables are used so it becomes pretty much a stationary platform in the sky,' Hawkey, a 27-year-old designer, said. 

The team set their sights on the highest in the world rather than just New Zealand as it would grab the attention of tour buses. 

'You've got to try and justify tour companies diverting from their current route so if they can do the same height bungee in Taupo or Rotorua there's not much to bring them all the way out here. But if it's the biggest in the world it's more of a draw card,' Johnson, a 26-year-old mechanical design engineer said. 

The balloon bungee is estimated to cost between up to $8m to establish. It would set you back $250 to say you've done the highest bungee jump in the world, or $80 if you wanted to watch a mate do it. 

The purpose of the Taranaki Tourism Startup Weekend, hosted at Manifold Co-working Space in New Plymouth, was to come up with a solution to a tourism-based problem.

Ideas were pitched on Friday night, top ideas picked by a vote, and then teams formed around them. 

The teams and industry mentors developed the best ideas and on Sunday night the winner picked by a panel of judges.

Hawkey's problem was there being no adrenalin based tourism in Taranaki. 

'There's surfing lessons but you can't turn those in to a heavy adrenalin rush because it is so hard to control. Stuff like skydiving and bungee jumping don't exist within Taranaki, so it's completely unsaturated. 

'Those types of activities drive the tour buses because they get anywhere from a 20 per cent to 35 per cent commission.'

As for where in Taranaki they would put the balloon bungee, they were weighing up between buying a property or leasing some land off a farmer where the cows could still graze.

'A real Kiwi experience,' Baine said. 

John Haylock, coordinator for Tapuae Roa the regional economic initiative, said one of the keys to developing tourism in Taranaki was more paid activities and attractions.

'Around New Zealand adventure tourism often forms a significant proportion of the market for paid activities and attractions. It would be great to see more adventure tourism businesses develop in Taranaki.

'The CloudJump concept will need further work to test its viability but it is certainly a concept that would stand out in the marketplace. While this is still an early stage idea, we're happy to work with the CloudJump team to see if the idea can be progressed.'