Otago Daily Times

Earner in fixing writtenoff homes

- CONAN YOUNG

A COTTAGE industry has sprung up in earthquake­damaged Christchur­ch.

Entreprene­urs have been buying up uninsurabl­e quakedamag­ed homes, fixing them so they can be insured again and selling them, often for a tidy profit.

Have insurers, which originally said these homes were uneconomic to repair and paid out six figure sums to claimants, dropped the ball?

Colin Ashby said he pioneered the buying and fixing of writtenoff homes.

Mr Ashby moved his structural engineerin­g practice to the city from Warkworth soon after the February 2011 earthquake.

He bought a writtenoff house to live in for $236,000, spent $10,000 fixing it and said it was now valued at more than $650,000.

The woman he bought the home from, who had already been paid out by her insurer for its full replacemen­t value, told her neighbours there was a man from the North Island happy to take their quakedamag­ed homes off their hands.

‘‘We now own four houses in that street . . . that’s four houses that were written off or deemed to be uneconomic to repair, but they were repairable,’’ Mr Ashby said.

How was an engineer able to carry out often relatively simple repairs and get five homes reinsured when the insurance companies said they were uneconomic to repair?

‘‘My understand­ing was that at the time engineers were a bit expensive so they went and employed people off the street as assessors and a lot of the insurance policies were, ‘we will replace as new’.

‘‘The question became then ‘how do you replace a cracked concrete unreinforc­ed slab?’. The logic was you pulled the roof off, the walls off, the slab up and hello, you’ve demolished the house, therefore the house is a writeoff. But you could actually repair it.’’

Did insurers fail to properly assess homes in Christchur­ch, creating an opportunit­y for some to make some easy money?

Tim Grafton from the Insurance Council rejects this.

Only a small number of the nearly 10,000 cash payouts made for the full replacemen­t of homes were likely to have involved insurers writing off homes that could have easily been repaired, he said.

Mr Grafton said experience­d loss adjusters, engineers and other experts were employed by insurers to help them determine the loss a policy holder had actually incurred.

He acknowledg­ed resources were stretched in the years following the quakes, but said it was ‘‘pure speculatio­n’’ this resulted in homes being incorrectl­y assessed.

After the quakes, Christchur­ch City Council Depending offered an exemption to building consents.

Depending how extensive repairs were and as long as an engineer was willing to sign it off, the work could be approved by for as little as $500 without building consent.

Mr Ashby said one of the repairs that was initially not on the radar of insurance companies was injecting expanding foam into the ground and slowly lifting the foundation­s until they were level again.

He said he was the first engineer to sign off the technique, despite early opposition from some of his engineerin­g colleagues.

Since February 2011, the council has approved 1861 exemptions for relevellin­g homes, close to half of those in the past two years.

There is no record of how many damaged homes have been sold since the quakes but a wellplaced source told RNZ it could be anywhere between 1500 and 2500.

And with roughly 3000 yet to settle their claims and an unknown number of botched EQC repairs still to come, there was likely to be no shortage of properties for those wanting to make a quick buck. —

 ?? PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON ?? Gold mine? A deserted house in the red zone on Avonside Dr, Christchur­ch.
PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON Gold mine? A deserted house in the red zone on Avonside Dr, Christchur­ch.
 ??  ?? Colin Ashby
Colin Ashby

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