The New Zealand Herald

$450k units to sell under ballot system

- — Anne Gibson

In a sign of Auckland’s heated housing market, a ballot is being run to sell five $450,000 one-bedroom planned Auckland apartments after unpreceden­ted demand prompted the developer to opt for the unusual system.

Helen O’Sullivan, chief executive of developers Ockham Residentia­l, said demand for such low-price places was so high that the best system was a ballot or applicatio­n system, closing on Wednesday.

But don’t bother applying for one of the 46sq m places with balconies and many appliances if you don’t comply with the Axis Series qualificat­ion system, aimed to provide lowpriced places for first-home buyers.

Applicants must fulfil strict criteria to access the process, O’Sullivan said.

“The owners must be New Zealand permanent residents or citizens; cannot put the home in the name of a family trust, company or nominee; must have a household income no higher than $120,000 gross per annum at the time of purchase and will agree to live in the house for a minimum of two years,” Ockham’s website on the criteria says.

The units are planned in the fiveblock, 120-unit Bernoulli Gardens at Hobsonvill­e Point, a project arranged around a communal garden where O’Sullivan said Ockham referred to ”character flats” rather than apartments.

“The ballot or approval system enables buyers to get their informatio­n together, so it gives them time. It’s fairer than first-come, first-served,” she said.

Ockham says most of the Hobsonvill­e Point places sell off the plans, including the Axis Series homes.

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