Weekend Herald

Luxury pile sells for record $28.9m

- Anne Gibson

A Takapuna waterfront mansion has sold for $28,888,000 during the winter, setting the record as the most expensive New Zealand house sale of the year, according to CoreLogic NZ.

In a Med meets Pacific theme, the sprawling Tuscan-style home with extensive tropical planting comes with its own gatehouse or separate guest house.

The grand home in a no-exit street is beside the public accessway to the beach and has stands of towering palm trees and a circular-style driveway with porte-cochere or grand hotel-style entrance way.

It is barred from public entrance with a sturdy double wrought-iron gate and has its own tennis court, all flanked by decades-old pohutakawa trees.

The two-level mansion in half-H layout stands empty, waiting for the buyer to move in. A worker said it had been bought by an Asian businessma­n who lives in New Zealand and who plans to make the mansion his family home.

Nick Goodall, CoreLogic’s head of research, said the sale outstrippe­d all other deals this year.

“The property at 19 O’Neills Ave sold on July 4 for $28.9m, when it had a capital value of $15.4m,” he said. That was in reference to its 2014 valuation. Auckland Council is due to release new valuations on Monday. The 2014 CV meant the property incurred annual rates of $40,634.43.

However, Lake View in Glenorchy near Queenstown is on the market for $33m and might sell before the end of the year, trumping Takapuna.

Quotable Value showed the O’Neills Ave luxury property spans three titles of almost a half-hectare between Milford and Takapuna, its lawns lined by native trees and facing out to Rangitoto Island.

Property records reference the three titles just as 19, although the mansion is built over 21 and 23 O’Neills Ave as well.

All up, the property sprawls across a generous 4396sq m in a city where a 200sq m site now takes a stand-alone house.

The same property hit the headlines in 2012 as the most expensive sale of that period at $15m. Sky Television founder Craig Heatley sold it to businessma­n Mark Stewart, son of Dame Adrienne Stewart and the late industrial­ist and manufactur­er Sir Robertson Stewart.

Heatley had owned the property since 1991 when records showed he paid only $2.5m for it.

Stewart’s family are entreprene­urs: Sir Robertson bought manufactur­er PDL in 1957 as a clapped-out war munitions business, then built it into a large, electrical equipment manufactur­er with annual revenues of $350m,

2000 staff and 11 manufactur­ing facilities.

After going into the business straight from university and spending 20 years representi­ng it in tough Asian and Middle Eastern markets, son Mark took over, then sold his family’s stake to French company Schneider for $97m in

2001, saying at the time it was “an offer we couldn’t refuse”.

His businesses trade under titles including Masthead and Medusa. The NBR Rich List puts the Stewart fortune at $330m.

 ?? Pictures / Doug Sherring, Google Earth ?? The property hit the headlines in 2012 when it was bought by businessma­n Mark Stewart (above).
Pictures / Doug Sherring, Google Earth The property hit the headlines in 2012 when it was bought by businessma­n Mark Stewart (above).

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