The New Zealand Herald

Queenstown rental pod ‘a bit airless’ — visitor

Firm insists feedback so far ‘overwhelmi­ngly positive’

- Anne Gibson property

‘It was like being in a coffin — a big one,” said Aucklander Finn Heenan, 18, of moving to a Queenstown accommodat­ion pod two months ago.

“It wasn’t too great to be honest,” said the builder who next month starts to study adventure tourism management. While staying at Jucy Snooze Queenstown, the Clevedon teen said he felt enclosed and his health suffered.

“There were no windows or fresh air and it was a bit like being in a spaceship. It cost $45 a night. The air was so dry that every morning I’d wake up with a sore throat.”

Heenan, a former St Kentigern College student, stayed in the pod for a fortnight before finding a backpacker­s where he gets a better night’s sleep and pays $32 a night.

But he has moved several times since arriving on April 20. He had to flee another backpacker’s which had live nightly concerts that left him sleepless.

He is one of the many people who have moved to the southern tourist mecca only to be shocked at the cost of accommodat­ion.

Yesterday, Trade Me Property released new data showing the median Queenstown Lakes rent had jumped 12.9 per cent since January, making it the most expensive area to rent in the country — a situation that has led to younger renters relying on unconventi­onal accommodat­ion, such as sleeping pods.

Asked to comment on Heenan’s experience, a Jucy spokeswoma­n defended the accommodat­ion, saying that sleeping in a pod was not to everybody’s taste and there would always be a small number of people who would find it’s not for them.

“Overall, we do receive overwhelmi­ngly positive comments on customers’ pod experience and the vibe in the Pod-Hostel itself on the likes of booking.com as well as directly to our staff,” the Jucy spokeswoma­n said.

She said the pods are designed “with customer experience in mind”, offering a range of amenities — including USB chargers, power points, a light and mirror — contained within the space.

“We also have fresh air flow vents into each and every room in our Queenstown property, which are on 24/7 as there are rooms without windows due to the building being built into a hill,” she said.

While the accommodat­ion may be comfortabl­e for a short-term stay, renters like Heenan are left with few longer-term options in a city that is now $240 a week more expensive than Auckland.

Trade Me Property head Nigel Jeffries said Queenstown rental listings fell 18 per cent this year compared with last year. “Housing affordabil­ity is the big driver behind this rental situation.

“With the average asking price for a property in Queenstown Lakes now more than $1 million, most renters are put off by the sheer size of the mortgage they’d need to own a property and end up choosing lifestyle over mortgage repayments,” Jeffries said.

“With more tenants staying put, this means less rentals coming onto the market.”

NZ’s median weekly rent rose 5.6 per cent on last year, he said. It stalled in May and stuck at April’s $475 a week.

The Herald reported last year on a Queenstown woman and her young daughter having to share a flat with revellers, kept awake by latenight drinking sessions and the sound of people having sex, due to the city’s rental crisis.

Itinerant workers are not the only ones being priced out of Queenstown’s rental market: Long-term residents are being left without stable accommodat­ion, too, the Herald reported last year, quoting Queenstown Lakes Community Housing Trust executive officer Julie Scott.

“We see all the time [ examples] of families who have been renting for five, 10 years in a property and have been paying $450 a week and all of a sudden they’re paying $700 a week.

“They can’t afford it so they’re having to move.”

There were no windows or fresh air and it was a bit like being in a spaceship. Finn Heenan (below)

 ??  ?? Jucy’s Queenstown pods offer USB chargers, power points, a light and mirror.
Jucy’s Queenstown pods offer USB chargers, power points, a light and mirror.
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