Marlborough Express

$8.5k fine for builder’s tiny homes

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A ‘‘cavalier’’ Marlboroug­h man who built five tiny houses and tried to sell some on Trade Me said he didn’t think he needed building consent because they were moveable.

Marlboroug­h Building Ltd owner Gary John Shields was fined $8500 for fashioning together five ‘‘small dwellings’’ on a property on Battys Rd, Blenheim, and connecting them to a wastewater system.

Shields told a court hearing a council outside Marlboroug­h told him a building consent was ‘‘not necessary’’ because the dwellings were ‘‘temporary works’’.

But the Marlboroug­h District Council argued that Shields’ background in the building industry meant he ‘‘ought to have known better’’.

The council said Shields was ‘‘reckless’’ to go ahead and build without checking with the local body in charge of building consents. Shields declined to comment when approached this week.

The council said Shields was ‘‘clearly aware’’ the dwellings did not have consent, but had proceeded to build a ‘‘significan­t’’ number of them, including one that was run as a hair salon and visited by the public.

One building was used by

Shields as his home, and the others were sitting at the back of his property, waiting to be sold.

‘‘This was not a simple sleepout or an additional building to a pre-existing consented building. This was rather five buildings constructe­d without consent,’’ the council said during the August court hearing.

The court decision said Shields came to council attention in September last year after it received a tip that he had several dwellings on a Battys Rd property, all with an ‘‘apparent lack of any consent’’.

Compliance officers visited the site the next month and thought the five dwellings, which had plumbing and drainage, did not comply with Building Code standards. Shields confirmed he had built the dwellings.

An officer later found the unconsente­d dwellings were for sale on Trade Me.

The council issued a ‘‘notice to fix’’ on October 12, meaning Shields had to remedy his tiny houses to comply with the law, or face a fine.

Shields met one of the council’s senior building control officers on December 20, and admitted the buildings were constructe­d without consent. A second ‘‘notice to fix’’ was issued the following day.

Shields was charged with two counts of breaching the Building Act and admitted to the charges at the Blenheim District Court in August.

Judge David Ruth thought it was ‘‘careless, if not reckless, and probably a bit cavalier’’ that Shields assumed he did not need to comply with Marlboroug­h’s building codes after contacting another council.

Ruth thought his experience meant he should have known better.

‘‘Mr Shields was at least cavalier in deciding to just barge on without making any further inquiries over and above what seemed to me to be quite a minimal inquiry, if anything,’’ Ruth said in his judgement notes.

However, he felt Shields’ personal circumstan­ces and character were ‘‘exemplary’’, and he had no blemishes on his record.

Ruth also noted Shields was unable to pay a substantia­l fine.

Shields was fined $8500, with 90 per cent paid to the council.

Council building control manager Bill East said in a council press release he was pleased the court had recognised the importance of building consents.

‘‘Anyone thinking of building or living in a relocatabl­e home is strongly encouraged to get in touch with council to discuss their options,’’ East said.

"Council welcomes greater provision of affordable homes and a wider choice of housing options.

‘‘However, all homeowners and tenants should receive the same quality and safety standard of home constructi­on, whether they are lower cost properties or not.’’

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