Google AI
The Times Australia

Times Media

Sweet success as Council green-lights $150 million Chocolate Experience at Cadbury Hobart



Glenorchy City Council has approved the $150 million Chocolate Experience at Cadbury, clearing the way for a project that will put Tasmania on the map and attract thousands of additional visitors per year to the State. 

The Experience, at the historic Cadbury factory site in Claremont, is forecast to welcome 431,000 visitors a year, inject over $120 million into the Tasmanian economy annually, and support more than 300 construction jobs and over 200 ongoing roles. 

“This is a huge win for Tasmania and for Claremont. It represents a generational boost for the local economy, creating jobs, attracting investment, and helping move Tasmania’s visitor economy to the next level. Securing Development Approval has taken years of working closely with the local community, Council and Cadbury, and it’s fantastic to see all that hard work starting to pay off,” 

“From the moment visitors arrive, this will be unlike any chocolate attraction in the world.  It will be an innovative, immersive and deeply emotive experience that uses storytelling and technology to bring the magic of chocolate-making to life. It will be full of surprise, nostalgia, creativity and joy and, of course, there will be plenty of chocolate along the way. It is one Tasmanians will be proud of and one I’m privileged to help deliver,” Mr Currant said. 

Tourism Industry Council Tasmania CEO Amy Hills said that in order for Tasmania to remain competitive as a visitor destination, it needed to support the type of experience, innovation and creativity that the Experience offers. 

“For our industry to go from strength to strength we need to keep innovating and keep investing in attractions.  This is a next-level concept that is going to make Tasmania the must-do destination that it deserves to be.  

“This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to tell the Cadbury story properly and authentically, and it will lift the whole industry with it.  Importantly, it will cater to a variety of visitors and deliver on the Tassie brand promise ten-fold,” Ms Hills said. 

Toby Smith, President of Mondelēz International for Japan, Australia, and New Zealand said Cadbury was proud to support the Experience as brand partner. 

“Cadbury's story and Tasmania's story have been intertwined for more than a century and this project will bring that story to life for hundreds of thousands of visitors every year, and help write the next chapter for Claremont, for Cadbury and for Tasmanian tourism.” 

Melbourne-based investment bank Kidder Williams is the sole financial advisor raising capital for the Experience. Kidder Williams is in the market and engaging with interested parties, with receipt of Development Approval an important step towards securing capital. 

Ninety five per cent of the project cost will be privately funded, with existing government support providing the confidence for its future success. 

The project is due to be complete by September 2028.

 

Times Lifestyle

Why We Travel: The Timeless Search for Somewhere Different

Every year, billions of people pack a suitcase, lock the front door and set off for somewhere else. Some fly halfway around the world to explore ancient cities. Others drive a few hours to a country town, a beachside apartment or a quiet cabin in t...

A Relationship Expert Reveals the Real Key to a Stronger Relationship

For a long time, we have romanticised the idea that a strong relationship means finding someone who can be your everything. Your best friend. Your confidant. Your emotional support system. The person who understands every part of you and meets ever...

How Australia's Childcare Crisis Is Taking a Toll on Parents - and What One App Is Doing About It

Australian mums and dads are increasingly anxious, exhausted, and distrustful of Australia’s childcare system - and the nation's headlines are a big reason why. Confidence in the Australian childcare industry has been shaken after dangerous practice...

Australia’s Changing Family Dynamic: When Adult Children Stay Home Longer

Australia’s housing affordability crisis is no longer simply an economic issue. It is reshaping the structure of the Australian family itself. Across the country, more young adults are remaining in the family home longer than previous generations...

The Arrival of Winter: More Than Just a Date on the Calendar

Winter arrives quietly in Australia. There is no dramatic wall of snow sweeping across the nation and no frozen months that completely shut down daily life. Yet when the seasons change, Australians feel it almost immediately. The arrival of winter ...

Australian mum creates Sandy Baby wipes to remove sand from baby bums

I’m Yaz, founder and mumma behind Sandy Baby®, an Australian designed and owned brand that was created from one very real parenting problem… I was sick of putting dry nappies onto sandy bums. Living near the beaches of Jervis Bay, beach days were ...

Times Magazine

Will Travis Kelce follow the athlete silicone ring trend?

From the NFL to the All Blacks, professional athletes have been ditching metal for silicone rings. W...

The AI economy: How artificial intelligence is creating the jobs of tomorrow in Australia

Artificial intelligence has become one of the most discussed technologies of the decade, often acc...

Yoga and Tai Chi: Why Simple Movement Still Inspires Millions

In a world of high-intensity workouts, fitness technology and ever-changing exercise trends, two a...

Technology

Why Australian Enterprises Are Reth…

The corporate landscape in Australia has undergone a permanent structural shift over the past few ...

Local News

Fremantle Ports to trial project to…

Fremantle Ports has partnered with Byssal and DevelopmentWA to trial an innovative nature-based pilo...

Culture

Is Fast Food Really Food?

It is a question that sounds provocative, but it goes to the heart of a growing debate about what ...

Travel

Overtourism: Why Some of the World's Mos…

For decades, attracting more visitors was the goal of tourism authorities around the world. More t...

The Times Features

Is Fast Food Really Food?

It is a question that sounds provocative, but it goes to the heart of a growing debate about what ...

Ultra-Processed Foods: The Hidden Ingredient in the Mod…

Walk through almost any Australian supermarket and much of what fills the shelves has one thing in...

Is Red Wine Good for the Human Body?

Red wine has long enjoyed a reputation as the healthiest alcoholic drink. From the vineyards of Fr...