The New Zealand Herald

Receivers calling for creditors

- Herald Anne Gibson Herald

The receivers of 13 businesses previously part of New Zealand’s secondlarg­est constructi­on company Hawkins are calling for creditors and say the directors of the businesses are giving their full support in the process.

Andrew Grenfell and Colin McElhinney of McGrathNic­ol are receivers and managers of Orange H Group — previously known as Hawkins Group — which is now in receiversh­ip along with 12 other businesses.

The companies in receiversh­ip are Orange H Group, H Constructi­on Group, Orange H Management, H Plant, Orange H Constructi­on, H Constructi­on South Island, H Constructi­on North Island, H Constructi­on North Island Group, H Constructi­on N.I, H Constructi­on Hobsonvill­e, H Infrastruc­ture Holdings, H Infrastruc­ture (NZ) and HUC. But it was too early to tell what money is available for or from any of those businesses, the receivers said.

Hawkins was second only to Fletcher Constructi­on in terms of the value of its work load.

The reported this month how Orange H Group was the McConnell entity set up to run down the residual Hawkins assets after the sale to Downer Group.

Orange H was tipped into receiversh­ip by its shareholde­r and creditor just 10 days after being ordered to pay $13.4 million over a leaky school.

David McConnell of Hawkins said earlier this month that Orange H now owed creditors approximat­ely $30m but had claims outstandin­g with customers of more than $20m, cash- backed bonds of $14m and further retentions owing.

Last year, the McConnell family sold their long-held interests in the business establishe­d by late patriarch Buck McConnell to ASX-listed Downer for nearly $60 million. Last April ASX-listed engineerin­g consultanc­y Downer EDI bought Hawkins’ constructi­on, infrastruc­ture and project management businesses from the McConnell family for A$55.4m ($59.9m).

Companies Office records show Orange H Group’s directors are David Arnot Williamson McConnell of Parnell, John Arnot Williamson McConnell of Remuera and Arthur William Young of Birkenhead. David McConnell was managing director of McConnell Group in Auckland and a Hawkins director.

Grenfell said in a letter this month that the businesses in receiversh­ip “were completing legacy building and infrastruc­ture projects not included in the sale of Hawkins Constructi­on to Downer in March, 2017. The receivers are currently reviewing the status of all outstandin­g projects but understand that the majority are complete with final claims and retentions still to be collected,” he said.

“It is not possible to give any indication of the likely outcome of the process. The directors are providing their full support,” he wrote.

On May 2, the reported how H Constructi­on North Island was ordered to pay about $13 million for leaky buildings that have troubled an Auckland school for the past eight years.

Botany Downs Secondary College, a co-educationa­l school with a roll of nearly 2000, resorted to using buckets in classrooms to deal with the leaks, a court has heard.

The three plaintiffs — the Minister of Education, Secretary for Education and the school’s board of trustees — said constructi­on defects, including inadequate ground clearance and poorly formed roofs and gutters, caused leaks in nine buildings.

H Constructi­on North Island Ltd, formerly known as Hawkins Constructi­on North Island Ltd (Hawkins), did the work between 2003 and 2009.

 ??  ?? Staff at Botany Downs Secondary College resorted to buckets to deal with leaks.
Staff at Botany Downs Secondary College resorted to buckets to deal with leaks.

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