The New Zealand Herald

Old council admin building born again

Resurrecti­ng The Cab into apartments — full project’s expected completion by 2024

- Anne Gibson

Every floor in Auckland’s historic Civic Administra­tion Building is being torn up and replaced, according to its developer. The sound of pneumatic drills and jackhammer­s pierce the air around the foot of the ex-Auckland Council headquarte­rs fronting Aotea Square in the largest current city conversion of a building from offices to apartments.

Building owner John Love of Love and Co said:

“It’s a steel-framed building and all 19 levels of concrete floors need to be removed. They were just not thick enough.” So 6cm floors are being ripped out and replaced by 15cm thick floors in the massive project which started in August last year, jump platforms establishe­d to hold skips which are filled with the concrete and then craned to the ground. Existing floors from level 19 down to level 13 had been removed by early November and new floors had been laid from level 19 down to 16, Love said.

Extensive asbestos throughout the building is another challenge: “It’s been removed from levels 19 down to 12 so far. It was far more extensive than anyone had envisaged. People thought much had been removed but it was right throughout. We’ll be down to ground with that by next March.”

In 2014, the council gradually left the block for 135 Albert St where it has new headquarte­rs. That left the existing building empty.

Around 2012, the then-council chief executive, Doug McKay, said the $93m cost of refurbishi­ng the block for the 450 staff in it was not economic. Demolition was an option, he said.

Last year, Allan Young, Panuku’s developmen­t director, said: “The cost of removing asbestos from the building, preserving heritage features consistent with a category A heritage status, and intensifyi­ng the land with housing and commercial spaces will be extremely costly so we are pleased that we were able to find a partner willing to take on this important work adjacent to Auckland’s most significan­t civic space.” Love said this month: “Constructi­on is well on track, irrespecti­ve of the challenges but having someone like Naylor Love on board — they have the capacity and ability to keep things moving.” Naylor Love is operating from teal Portacom offices on Aotea Square, with roof-top solar panels to partly power its operations.

Building work began on The Cab last August when the contractor­s arrived on the site and Love said before that, extensive designing, resource consenting, tendering and pre-sales processes were under way. Of the 118 new apartments planned to be build inside the ex-council building’s frame, 10 per cent deposits had been taken on 83 units by early November, comprising 67 per cent of the block, he said. “We’re very happy with the sales. We’ve got a good balance of owner occupiers who have bought, generally these places won’t be rented out.” Project completion is forecast for December 2021 “and hopefully people will start to move in before Christmas next year“, Love said. Some apartments have decks, being reinstated on one face of the building and measuring 1m x 8m. One-bedroom apartments of 56sq m presold for around $700,000 up to the entire top floor 19th storey penthouse, for sale, for $15m, he said. That place has an open courtyard with rooms arranged around the outside and the apartment will be 500sq m. “The skygarden apartment’s roof is open in the middle and it’s unlike anything in Australasi­a,” Love said.

All up, Love has plans for a larger site than just The CAB: new buildings are planned to rise alongside the apartments on a half-hectare site. “All up, It will add about $1b of value to the city,” Love said, forecastin­g completion of the entire project by around 2024 — just in time for the completion of the city’s $4.4b City Rail Link and the Aotea Station near The Cab.

 ?? Photo / Doug Sherring ?? Developer John Love in front of the Civic Administra­tion Building in Aotea Square which he is turning into apartments.
Photo / Doug Sherring Developer John Love in front of the Civic Administra­tion Building in Aotea Square which he is turning into apartments.
 ?? Image / Supplied ?? The Sky Garden penthouse apartment to be built on the top floor of The Cab developmen­t.
Image / Supplied The Sky Garden penthouse apartment to be built on the top floor of The Cab developmen­t.

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