The New Zealand Herald

Constructi­on pipeline holds firm

Total constructi­on value output up 5% at $39b Constructi­on pipeline forecast to peak at $43b in 2021 $8.8b worth of new houses built in Auckland last year New house builds forecast to + 39% to $12.2b Upbeat building industry, despite some high profile

- Anne Gibson

Sinking business confidence is at odds with robust economic fundamenta­ls, perhaps no more so than in the booming constructi­on sector where growth is forecast in the industry said to be the main current contributo­r to GDP growth.

New Zealand’s total constructi­on value output rose 5 per cent last year to hit a record $39 billion worth of work and Auckland new housebuild­ing consents and completion­s continue to climb.

The sector employs 9 per cent of the national workforce and this year is forecast to finish more than $40b of work— new houses, infrastruc­ture and commercial constructi­on.

Cranes on our skyline are but one example. In this year’s third quarter, 131 large tower cranes were up nationally, 95 of them in Auckland alone, and although numbers are levelling off they are still at a record level, the RLB Crane Index shows.

Fletcher Building increased constructi­on division gross revenue from $1.6b to $1.7b in the year to June 30, 2019, when it had a $1.4b backlog of work. And although it had intended to reject high-rise work after losses in the B+I division, it said in August that it had confirmed intention to “recommence focused bidding in the vertical constructi­on market”.

Culum Manson of New Zealand’s largest privately owned developers, Mansons TCLM, said: “We have north of $1b value of work under way and we’ve got a lot more coming.

“Sentiment surveys don’t have anything to do with us. There’s a lot of talk about procuremen­t processes and going for the lowest price but good operators don’t do that anyway.

“We have a number of suppliers and contractor­s we’ve been working with for decades and we’re all sensible about how we go about our business. We don’t put too much risk on each other. If you’re just going for the bottom dollar, you’re going to get problems,” Manson said.

Some current Mansons TCLM projects include:

● This year’s biggest real estate deal for $247m, selling the underconst­ruction new office block at 155 Fanshawe St;

● 136 Fanshawe St, the former House of Haghi rugs site, where a new 22,938sq m office is rising with 212 car parks;

● At 46 Albert St, a $350m 10-level office building next to the new EVEN hotel, to also include a Holiday Inn;

● 74 St Georges Bay Rd, new offices for Mansons, now next door. That Fearon Hay design is 2054sq m with 34 car parks;

● Luxury apartments, Coates Ave, Ora¯kei, almost completed.

● Ted Manson Foundation work including Liverpool St apartments, now finished, in the CBD, and Glen Eden apartments, almost finished.

Manson said it was his job to ensure a future pipeline of work and he envisaged no slowdown: “We have at least six years of constructi­on locked in ahead of us. We can see opportunit­ies for the future and in our sector of the office market, people are still wanting to upgrade and it’s more affordable to do that. It’s like getting a new car or a new phone.”

In August, the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment released the seventh National Constructi­on Pipeline Report which forecast building work to rise next year, so that by 2021 it will reach a $43b peak and remain high at $42b in 2024.

Company failures, liquidatio­ns, receiversh­ips and litigation dominate sector media coverage which could give the false impression of a decline. Key pipeline report findings were:

● Constructi­on growth was forecast to continue through to 2021;

● Residentia­l building in Auckland was forecast to continue to grow;

● Non-residentia­l building activity is forecast to peak in 2021;

● Infrastruc­ture activity is forecast to overtake non-residentia­l activity by 2023.

House-building is forecast to “level out” from next year and non-residentia­l activity is tipped to “tail off”.

“New Zealand’s total constructi­on value increased by 5 per cent in 2018 to $39b. This year’s forecast is for continued growth in the value of constructi­on to $43b in 2021.

“Post this peak in 2021, the forecast is for a slight tailing off in constructi­on value to $42b in 2024.”

But Auckland, with around 40,000 annual migrants, would buck that trend and enjoy strong ongoing new house-building growth.

Last year, $8.8b of new houses went up in Auckland, but that would grow to $12.2b by the end of the forecast period, 39 per cent above 2018 levels, the report said.

Satish Ranchhod, a Westpac senior economist, understand­s why business sentiment surveys are not

glowing when it comes to the building sector because he is also forecastin­g a slight decline.

“We’re forecastin­g further strong growth in that sector this year and next but just like the pipeline report, a levelling off in 2021,” he said.

“That’s due to a wind-down in Canterbury reconstruc­tion and the rapid population growth which was fuelling housing demand being past its peak.”

Immigratio­n peaked in 2016 with a net gain of 64,000 people and is forecast to be slightly below 50,000 this year, Ranchhod said.

“We’ve had population growth far outstrippi­ng building levels but now we’ve seen a ramp-up in house building which is running more or less commensura­te with where it should be.

“Should business be gloomy about the outlook for constructi­on? There are reasons for concerns, particular­ly on the big infrastruc­ture projects where costs are rising. But that should be balanced against a strong pipeline of planned work,” Ranchhod said.

On Thursday, Auckland mayor Phil Goff said a record 14,345 new home consents were issued in the year to August.

“Just seven years ago we were only issuing about 3600 consents a year — we’ve issued more than 4000 in the last three months alone.

“In August 1407 dwelling consents were issued, taking the total for the past 12 months to 14,345.”

Furthermor­e, 1244 new dwellings were completed in August, by having a Code Compliance Certificat­e issued, taking the total number of finished new Auckland dwellings completed this year to 10,979.

“Building new houses in Auckland remains a priority as we continue to deal with the pressures of housing growth and unaffordab­ility, but these figures show that we are addressing the shortfall,” Goff said.

“It’s also encouragin­g to see that Auckland is becoming a more compact city, as the Unitary Plan intended.

“Sixty per cent of the consents issued in August were for apartments or other attached housing types such as townhouses and units. In the past 12 months, 94 per cent of new dwellings consented have been inside the Rural Urban Boundary. Auckland is growing up instead of just out.”

Growth is perhaps best explained by Ross Wilson, an Auckland Council analyst in the research and evaluation unit, writing on the city’s building consents: “For October 2019 update onwards, they are now so high that I have had to expand the graph axis — again.”

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