Taranaki Daily News

$23m for 68 new KiwiBuild homes in Marfell

- Christina Persico

After more than a decade of waiting, a New Plymouth suburb has been promised $23 million to build 68 KiwiBuild homes.

Housing and Urban Developmen­t Minister Phil Twyford made the announceme­nt

in Marfell yesterday morning.

Constructi­on is due to begin in the next six months, with the first families moving in during mid2019, Twyford said.

Two-thirds will be threebedro­om homes and the remainder four bedrooms. All of them will be built to a Homestar 6 rating with constructi­on starting early next year.

Twyford was adamant this was not another empty promise for Marfell, which has been waiting for a makeover since 2008 when 28 state homes were removed from Discovery Pl and Banks St.

But the 2010 Christchur­ch earthquake got in the way and the project came to a halt.

‘‘A couple of times over the last few years I have visited Marfell . . .

because for me it was always a place that signified the lack of action on building more public housing,’’ he said.

‘‘It will revitalise and rejuvenate this community. It will bring people back into this neighbourh­ood.’’

Twyford said KiwiBuild was about restoring the Kiwi dream of home ownership to thousands of

young families who typically would have been unable to buy their first home.

‘‘Many of the KiwiBuild homes built at this developmen­t will be under $400,000, and all will have a maximum price of $450,000, meaning the mortgage repayments for houses in this

price range will be same as the average rent for a three-bedroom home in New Plymouth.’’

More than 1400 people had already registered interest, he said.

While conceding the homes were aimed at middle-income earners of $70-$90,000 who could take on a mortgage, rather than low-income families, a new government ‘‘shared equity’’ scheme, where the government and private investors buy a share of the initial mortgage and the buyer later buys out the government, was also gaining traction.

‘‘If we can pull that off, even your low to middle-incomes who want to take on a low-budget home will have that opportunit­y.’’

Chair of the Housing NZ board, Adrienne Young-Cooper, said work would start ‘‘imminently’’ as soon as the contract was signed.

‘‘You might see it as grass today but it will be earth tomorrow.’’

New Plymouth mayor Neil Holdom said councillor Shaun Biesiek had been ‘‘banging down

his door’’ about Marfell since day one.

‘‘It will change the nature of this community. I’m sure there will be many people looking to invest in this.’’

Marfell residents Luke Ah Kuoi and Krete O’Brien, with baby Tailor-Joe, said it would be a good thing for Marfell, although he did query the price of the homes.

‘‘For a low-decile area, I think that’s still pretty steep,’’ Ah Kuoi said. ‘‘They’re trying something, I guess.’’

He said landlords also had to do some work on their properties ‘‘instead of letting them run to the ground’’.

‘‘This is actually the cheapest place and it’s still expensive for what it is.’’

Community volunteer Ruth Pfister said she was grateful for what they were doing but she still had concerns.

‘‘I’m just so mindful of those people who there’s no way that they could be part of this.

‘‘I do wonder about how it will work having people living here in a way that a lot of the people in

the state housing sector couldn’t even dream of living, and how that might work socially.’’

 ?? PHOTOS: ANDY JACKSON/STUFF ?? Krete O’Brien, holding Tailor-Joe O’Brien, and Luke Ah Kuoi love living in the area but say the house behind them, where they live, is cold and damp. Right: Concept drawings of the new homes.
PHOTOS: ANDY JACKSON/STUFF Krete O’Brien, holding Tailor-Joe O’Brien, and Luke Ah Kuoi love living in the area but say the house behind them, where they live, is cold and damp. Right: Concept drawings of the new homes.
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