The Northern Advocate

Kāinga Ora to remove old homes

Part of the plan for 250 state houses to be available across Northland in 2 years

- Imran Ali

Plans are under way to replace up to 250 state houses across Northland over the next couple of years in an ambitious plan to support families struggling to find affordable housing.

Kāinga Ora has submitted a resource consent with the Whangārei District Council to either remove or deconstruc­t four homes on McClintock St in Whau Valley and replace them with eight new twostorey buildings to be built by next year.

They will range from two to five bedrooms.

Three of the planned homes will include wheelchair access bathrooms and bedrooms, suitable for disabled tenants.

One home on Murdoch Crescent in Raumanga will also be either removed or deconstruc­ted and three new ones built by 2023.

There will be one two-storey home with four double bedrooms, one twostorey with three double bedrooms and one one-storey with two double bedrooms.

All homes will be built, subject to council approval, to Homestar 6 and healthy homes standards.

The existing Kāinga Ora homes may be deconstruc­ted and taken to a dump or sold to housing or iwi groups for $1 once they are checked for health and safety suitabilit­y.

“An iwi group may own land and, where possible, we’ll sell them existing homes. We’ll try to recycle as much as we can, and where we can’t we’ll take it to the dump,” Kāinga Ora regional director for Northland Jeff Murray said.

The plan to replace the old homes, he said, was to provide families and those supporting elderly and disabled family members with warm and dry accommodat­ion.

“The plan is to have closer to 250 homes before June 2024 across the region and two-thirds of those will be in Whangārei. We are looking at a number of options, and once we finalise the preferred options we’ll then seek funding.”

Murray said Kāinga Ora has begun working with the local community on the redevelopm­ent plan from the beginning of this year. A plan for state houses in tangarei, where Kainga Ora owned 40 per cent of the housing stock, was also being looked at, he said.

Of the 2254 homes Kainga Ora owns in Northland, Whangārei has 1450, Far North 687, and Kaipara 117.

Its budget allowed for a provision of about 2500 homes.

Murray said apart from redevelopi­ng existing houses, the Government agency was also actively looking at buying land for housing developmen­t.

Meanwhile, work is well under way on 37 state houses on 3.2ha of land at Puriri Park Rd, Maunu, zoned for residentia­l housing by the council.

Kāinga Ora was given the green light by independen­t commission­ers to build 15 one-bedroom duplexes, four two-bedroom duplexes, one three-bedroom standalone house, six three-bedroom duplexes, eight fourbedroo­m duplexes and three fivebedroo­m standalone homes. Murray said seven homes would be completed by May this year.

Apart from the developmen­t on Puriri Park Rd, the Government will make 180 extra state houses available in Northland over the next two years.

There will be 105 in Whangārei, 65 in the Far North and 10 in Kaitaia.

Kāinga Ora is also negotiatin­g with the council to buy a car park site on Vinery Lane and another on Dent St, next to Almond Court flats, and build high-rise apartments as part of its plan to build 235 homes across Northland over the next three years.

The proposal is contained in the draft Te Tai Tokerau Regional Plan.

 ?? ?? New state homes take shape at Puriri Park Rd and the first seven are expected to be completed by May. Inset: An artist’s impression of what eight new two-storey homes will look like in Whau Valley.
New state homes take shape at Puriri Park Rd and the first seven are expected to be completed by May. Inset: An artist’s impression of what eight new two-storey homes will look like in Whau Valley.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand