The New Zealand Herald

$2b town centre near Drury

Scheme has grown to a proposed 2500 residences

- Anne Gibson property editor

Anew $2 billion-plus 2500-residence community with an entirely new town centre is being planned near Drury. Charles Ma, the former joint managing director of Auckland’s biggest CBD apartment project, Sugartree, is heading the developmen­t of Auranga to be created on a 160ha site in South Auckland.

“This will be a $2b-plus project and 2500 residences will be built, from apartments to stand-alone homes, ranging in price from $585,000 to $1.5m,” the Shortland St-based Ma said.

Sugartree, between Union St and Nelson St, is now being completed and will have 686 apartments when it is finished, Ma said.

Land purchases for Auranga amounted to $325m, he said.

An initial 1350 residences were planned but other land purchases had been made and the scheme had grown to a proposed 2500 residences, Ma said.

Some of the land is already zoned for the project but other parts are not and a planning applicatio­n is with Auckland Council, Ma said.

The site lies on the inner reaches of Manukau Harbour’s Pahurehure Inlet, west of Drury village and Ma said 29.3ha of earthworks are now under way. Part of the land — an 84.6ha slice — has been zoned a Special Housing Area.

Resource consents have also been

HWatch the video at nzherald.co.nz CBD approved for about 400 residences and the civil constructi­on contract has been awarded for the first stage, he said. The first titles are due to be issued later next year or in 2019, Ma said.

The civil engineer in his 20s has a degree from Auckland University and is chief executive of Made — Ma Developmen­t Enterprise­s — and chief executive of Auranga.

Last month, the Herald reported Drury was set to receive a major upgrade, with over $2 billion of infrastruc­ture and developmen­ts planned. The more than $2b of public and private investment will be committed over the next 10 years.

Ma said Auranga was on the same scale as Hobsonvill­e Point and had some similariti­es. He cited wide footpaths and design features to minimise cars in residentia­l locations.

Residentia­l, commercial and retail uses were envisaged including a new village centre, school, retirement village and many hectares of public land, he said. The number of new shops was undecided, he said.

Although the site is far from the city’s CBD, many new residents of Auranga will work in the area, he predicted. The scheme would take about a decade to complete.

 ??  ?? Artist’s impression of a home in the new Auranga developmen­t.
Artist’s impression of a home in the new Auranga developmen­t.

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