Intended Marsden City land zoned Mixed Use on offer in receivership sale
A sizeable chunk of urban Mixed Use zoned development land once promoted as the site for a Marsden City just south of Whangarei has been placed on the market for sale through a receivership process.
Featured in Bayleys’ Total Property magazine, the 83ha block of land comprises 88 titles with resource consent granted to subdivide an additional 45 residential sections.
A sealed roading network throughout the land has been completed, with preliminary infrastructure services laid for telecommunications, and waste- water connections.
The freehold block, next to State Highway 1, is being marketed for sale as one lot by tender through Scott Kirk, of Bayleys Auckland, and Duncan Napier, of Bayleys Warkworth, under instructions from the receivers. Tenders close on August 27.
Kirk says the site’s multiple zonings allow for a multitude of enduse configurations encompassing residential, commercial, and indus- trial components. The land has gradually been developed since the mid2000s and was first zoned for purely commercial and industrial uses, but a private plan change several years ago saw a portion of the land rezoned for residential use.
The property for sale sits on the fringe of the designer residential and retail urban development known as Marsden Cove, along a coastal strip heading south from Marsden Pt Wharf and the adjacent oil refinery.
“The portion of land facing on to State Highway 1 linking Whangarei and the Far North to Auckland i s zoned for light industrial and commercial activities,” Kirk says.
“As a cornerstone of urban support infrastructure, this land was identified to house the likes of a large Foodtown or Countdown or Pak’nSave supermarket with a customer catchment area that would encompass Marsden Cove, Waipu, and as far south as Langs Beach.
“In addition, a neighbourhoodstyle convenience retail block could be built potentially containing units occupied by a pharmacy, liquor store, pizza outlet, and petrol station with an internalised multinational fastfood component. The last four years has seen an increase of such hubs on the outskirts of provincial New Zealand cities immediately adjacent to major roading or motorway links.”
Kirk says both options could still be successfully undertaken, as the business cases for them are unchanged in terms of competition and the population demographics.
Napier says the developer’s overarching vision for Marsden City was that businesses in the eastern precinct of the land would not only be close to motorway access but would also act as a “sound barrier” for the neighbouring residential sites.
“The east- facing portions of the site are zoned for residential development, either as larger lifestyle- sized blocks in their current configuration, or with some degree of densification if the current additional subdivision consents are initiated,” he says.
“The larger residential section sites allow for strategic tree- plantings enabling the residential neighbour- hood to be effectively partitioned off from the commercial and industrial areas — thereby creating a clean line of land- use demarcation.
“Obviously, being somewhat more inland from the waterways and marina aspects of Marsden Cove, sections at Marsden City would be priced at lower levels. This point of difference will still be available to any new owner of the Marsden City land.”
The residential component of Marsden Cove was first released to the market in 2012 and was promoted as an upmarket coast lifestyle location as a satellite town to Whangarei some 20 minutes’ drive north.
“The land being sold through the receivers is not part of the original Marsden Cove masterplan development, but was bought and developed with the intention of partially replicating, then piggy- backing, off the anticipated growth of the coastal hub,” Napier says.
“Marsden Cove is predominantly a residential development. The intention was that Marsden City would be the retail, commercial and light in- dustrial land to service residents living in Marsden Cove. The hard work has all been done over the past three years in getting the block to its current status.”
Kirk says that because there are so many potential land- use combinations for the 83ha site, it would be virtually impossible to put a suggested dollar value on the total parcel.
“Developers will have their own visions for what can be done with the block. Obviously the per square metre rates vary considerably between industrial or residential enduse, and that impacts on the up- front values depending on what percentage of the land is allocated for that purpose,” he says.
Data from the Real Estate Institute of New Zealand shows that residential land- only sales across Greater Whangarei, both in volume and dollar- value, have been increasing steadily since September 2012. “This increase in activity is a good indicator for the next owner of this land on the best possible land usage,” Kirk says.