Weekend Herald

Only way is up for social housing aim

Most of the 56 apartments will fill highest need for singles, older folk

- Anne Gibson

Auckland’s tallest social housing highrise tower is up and will open next year, its 18 levels standing high above the surroundin­g buildings on one of the CBD’s steepest streets.

Locally owned CMP Constructi­on is building Life Apartments, the $30 million 50m-plus 92-unit block at 40-42 Liverpool St above Queen St for the philanthro­pic Ted Manson Foundation. The foundation uses money from one of the city’s richest men to house its poorest.

Manson, head of property company Mansons TCLM, said he personally funded the site purchase, planning and resource consents, design, constructi­on and fit-out costs for the tower, which has 56 one-bedroom apartments “because the Ministry of Social Developmen­t says that’s the highest need in the city, mainly for singles and older people”.

Private buyers will purchase some units but the ministry will lease most of the tower residences. Community provider Compass Housing Services would tenant and manage the building, Manson said.

“I’m doing it to make a difference,” he said of the project, due to be finished next winter.

“It’s a beautiful building, far better than I ever imagined.”

Housing NZ Corporatio­n said Life Apartments were double the height of any buildings the state owned in Auckland.

“The tallest we own is 139 Greys Ave, which is nine storeys. We lease in taller buildings, but not the whole thing,” a spokesman said.

Auckland Community Housing Provider Network chairwoman Hope Simonsen said new social housing was good because it was needed.

“As a philanthro­pist and a developer, Ted is doing some pioneering stuff,” she said.

“At the moment as a city we are in desperate need of good-quality social housing so any efforts made in that area are good. It’s important to consider how communitie­s are being shaped and developed to include housing to provide for people across the continuum. It needs to provide for people of all income levels.”

But constructi­on experts said building on such a small, steep site between Queen St and Symonds St had been challengin­g: the ground floor steps across three levels, traffic management was tight, another property investor’s site opposite had to be leased for “lay down” of equipment, vehicles, bins and portable offices, while trucks needed special rubber chocks beneath their wheels to secure them on the steep hill.

I’m doing it to make a difference. Ted Manson

Sam Colgan, foundation community housing projects manager, said ground conditions were not as expected. “Piling had to be slightly deeper than anticipate­d in the geotechnic­al report. Client-led changes increased costs during constructi­on including an upgrade to the specificat­ions of the apartments and the building’s facade.”

Paul Brown Architects designed robust concrete floor and wall units with a minimum longevity of 50 years for the 368sq m site, where the gradient was about 30 per cent.

CMP commercial manager Andrew Moore said windows from NZ Windows in Tauranga were fitted into pre-cast concrete panel walls made by Wilson Precast before they were delivered to the site, speeding constructi­on. One floor rose every week and teams worked seven days a week: “We’ve absolutely smashed this project out.”

Project manager James Sutherland of CMP said: “We built 15 floors in four months.”

The Ted Manson Foundation will be responsibl­e for looking after the building’s exterior and common areas, along with Mansons TCLM, and CMP is giving apartment buyers a

25-year warranty.

“The foundation’s aim is to provide long-term housing to those New Zealanders who are struggling. We want to provide robust, safe, warm, healthy homes with long-term security,” Manson said.

Tenants will pay only a maximum

25 per cent of their income in rent because they will qualify for incomerela­ted rent subsidies. Seventy-three of Life Apartment’s 93 units will be social housing places.

“It’s a high social housing quota because I’m doing it to make a difference. What’s the point of doing it without that? I would have had it all social housing but the Government wouldn’t allow that,” Manson said of the ministry’s demands for private/ social tenancy balance. “They want a mixture.”

Manson is building a $70m twint-ower 10 and 11-level apartment blocks at Glen Eden and plans to build a third $65m social housing block in Avondale, although work is yet to begin there. He plans a fourth project at Papatoetoe, saying the CBD, west and south had the greatest need for social housing.

“We had a community event there recently. People were delighted. The Ted Manson Foundation purchased two new 12-seater vans to transport many different school and sporting groups in the area and we’re building a playground at the local primary school. The Glen Eden developmen­t will be finished around the end of next winter,” Manson said. There, 90 apartments out of 165 will be for social housing.

 ?? Photo / Doug Sherring. ?? Ted Manson in front of the $30 million Life Apartments which are being developed in Liverpool St. The aim of the philanthro­pic Ted Manson Foundation is to provide struggling Kiwis with safe, warm, long-term housing.
Photo / Doug Sherring. Ted Manson in front of the $30 million Life Apartments which are being developed in Liverpool St. The aim of the philanthro­pic Ted Manson Foundation is to provide struggling Kiwis with safe, warm, long-term housing.

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