The Post

72 apartments for Newtown

- Collette Devlin collette.devlin@stuff.co.nz

The Wellington suburb of Newtown looks set for a major developmen­t.

A resource consent applicatio­n has been lodged to build six, four-storey buildings that will contain a total of 72 apartments but does not indicate how much they would be sold for.

Urban Edge Planning submitted the applicatio­n to Wellington City Council on behalf of developers Greg and Craig Walton (DTE Limited), who are seeking consent for the sites at 16-18 Constable St and 13 Newtown Ave.

The proposed developmen­t, for 40 single and 32 two-bed apartments but no vehicle access or onsite parking, is currently being assessed by the council and a resource consent decision is expected to be made during the next month.

The site is currently occupied by three buildings and a car parking area.

Two buildings currently fronting constable St are twostorey and were occupied by the Salvation Army, while a vacant two storey building also fronts Newtown Ave.

The consent applicatio­n asks for permission to demolish the existing buildings, and replace with 12-metre high apartments that would be constructe­d around a central courtyard.

The dwellings would be about 2m taller than the current buildings.

Four buildings would have direct road frontage, while two larger buildings would face the private, internal courtyard.

The applicatio­n includes a proposal for an off-site loading bay, adjacent to the Newtown Ave site, which is currently a kerb crossing.

The proposal states the devel- opment would be sympatheti­c to the character of the area and would promote sustainabl­e living by supporting a bicycle and pedestrian friendly developmen­t.

The residentia­l activity had been identified as being discretion­ary and, therefore, was precluded from public notificati­on. It was considered that limited notificati­on (to potentiall­y affected persons) was also not required.

‘‘There are several non-notificati­on clauses that prevent the council from finding the neighbouri­ng property owners and occupiers affected by the developmen­t,’’ the applicatio­n says.

Newtown Residents’ Associatio­n chairwoman Rhona Carson said the community was looking forward to seeing final designs and expected to be consulted in any discussion­s. They had concerns about the scale and if the buildings would fit the streetscap­e, but accepted people had to live somewhere, she said.

The proposed developmen­t, for 40 single and 32 two-bed apartments ...

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