Horowhenua Chronicle

Subdivisio­n to add 2500 more homes

Will bring 5000 people to Levin

- Hamish Cardwell, RNZ

Aplan for a massive new housing developmen­t north of Wellington could see the town of Levin expand by a quarter.

The Horowhenua District Council calls it the most significan­t residentia­l developmen­t in the district’s history.

For three years, the council has been working with landowners on a plan to turn land near Levin — currently used for grazing and lifestyle blocks — into at least 2500 new dwellings for about 5000 people.

Public submission­s on a proposed district plan change to allow the developmen­t opened yesterday and runs until February 1.

The developmen­t is the equivalent of building a settlement the size of taki, Paeroa or Alexandra beside the town, currently home to 18,800 people.

The 420-hectare block called Taraika is slated to boast a shopping centre, a school, parks and reserves.

Horowhenua mayor Bernie Wanden said with housing under pressure, the project could not start soon enough.

“We’re the third fastest growing district in the country at the moment, [the] population is exploding.

“We badly need some developmen­t, we badly need some new housing.”

The developmen­t got a big boost from the Government in August, with $25 million in loans and grants.

Wanden said that had fasttracke­d the project, with the aim for sections to go on the market within months and roading and infrastruc­ture built in six years.

He said by the end of the decade, the huge motorway projects connecting the area to Wellington could make it an hour-long straight shot to the capital.

The mayor said this would attract those who wanted the benefit of small town living but also wanted to keep their jobs in the big city.

“So we can hopefully help solve some of the housing issues that Wellington region has as well.

We’re the third fastest growing district in the country at the moment. Bernie Wanden, Horowhenua mayor

“We are considered to have a lifestyle that is appealing to a lot of people but also, obviously the value of properties up here is considerab­ly lower than it is in Wellington, and even in Ka¯piti, so you can get really good value for here as well.”

Levin is home to a large number of retirees.

One of its ward councillor­s and salon owner, Victoria Kaye-Simmons, said most people were excited by prospect of young blood in the area.

“More young families, there’s going to be another primary school built and possibly another shopping centre — all of this stuff.

“I think that’s going to be really exciting and I think people are going to be truly quite amazed by what’s going to be happening at that end of the Horowhenua.”

But Horowhenua Residents and Ratepayers Associatio­n chairwoman Christine Moriarty is not sold on the idea.

She said there were already water restrictio­ns every year and there was not enough water for the new developmen­t.

“My biggest fear is the infrastruc­ture that we have in

Levin is just not going to cope. And the outcome will be that the existing ratepayers will have sanctions put on them to not be able to use [water].”

She doubted there would be high demand for the houses, and said ratepayers would be stuck carrying the can.

“I don’t think there’s 2500 people that¯wantO to come here.

“I just don’t believe that the sort of houses they’re building, [that] there’s going to be enough people to buy them and it’s just going to be a white elephant.”

 ??  ?? Gladstone Green, the largest subdivisio­n in Levin in a decade, has been renamed Taraika.
Gladstone Green, the largest subdivisio­n in Levin in a decade, has been renamed Taraika.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand