Otago Daily Times

Consent sought for house at Dinner Flat

- By TIM MILLER

THE wealthy Britishbor­n owner of Mt Isthmus Station on the western shores of Lake Hawea plans to build a house with an unconventi­onal design on the property.

Singaporeb­ased former hedge fund manager Richard Magides bought the 2945ha station in 2014 from the Burdon family for a reported $7 million.

According to the Overseas Investment Office’s full decision on the sale, Mr Magides planned to spend about $5 million building a luxury farm and wilderness lodge and develop tourism activities on the property.

As part of the conditions of the sale, Mr Magides had to apply for the resource consent needed to build the lodge within 18 months of the sale being finalised, which happened in late 2015.

Once resource consent had been granted, the lodge needed to be completed within two years, or else Mr Magides would breach the conditions of the sale.

In his applicatio­n to buy the station, Mr Magides said he expected the lodge to create 30 fulltimeeq­uivalent temporary jobs and seven permanent jobs and host up to eight guests.

His New Zealand company, New Zermatt Properties Ltd, has applied for resource consent to build a house of an unconventi­onal design at Dinner Flat, about 15km north of the Lake Hawea township.

Two previous resource consents have been granted for the land that establishe­d a building platform there, allowing a dwelling, farm building or lodge to be built.

The building is described as a dwelling in the plans and there is no mention of it being used as a luxury lodge.

Queenstown Lakes District Council spokeswoma­n Vida McCord said that under the council’s district plan, an applicant did not have to specify whether a building in the rural general zone would be used as a lodge.

Designed to mimic the flow of the surroundin­g landscape, the building includes four peaks of varying heights and almost appears to curve into itself.

It will be finished with muted browns and greys with a very low level of light reflectanc­e.

At groundfloo­r level, the building will house a kitchen, living areas facing northeast across Lake Hawea and four bedrooms.

A veranda will be located along the southeaste­rn and eastern elevations of the building.

Overseas Investment Office spokeswoma­n Joanna Carr said the office had been told by the investor (Mr Magides) that resource consents had been lodged with the Queenstown Lakes District Council.

If consent was approved, constructi­on was expected to start later this year, the OIO had been told.

Flanked by both Lake Wanaka and Lake Hawea, Mt Isthmus Station was originally part part of Glen Dene, a pastoral lease property that went through tenure review in 2007.

It was put up for sale in 2009. Mr Magides also owns a number of other notable properties, including Ben Avon Station in the Ahuriri Valley, Parora Bay Winery in Russell and land in Queenstown.

He made his fortune as a cofounder of Singaporeb­ased hedge fund Artradis Fund Management, which at its peak had assets estimated about $US4.5 billion.

tim.miller@odt.co.nz

 ?? IMAGE: ARCHITECTU­RE WORKSHOP LTD. ?? Undulating design . . . Architectu­ral drawings of the proposed dwelling that Britishsor­n former hedge fund manager and owner of Mt Isthmus Qtation Richard Magides plans to suild on his 2945ha station overlookin­g Lake Hawea.
IMAGE: ARCHITECTU­RE WORKSHOP LTD. Undulating design . . . Architectu­ral drawings of the proposed dwelling that Britishsor­n former hedge fund manager and owner of Mt Isthmus Qtation Richard Magides plans to suild on his 2945ha station overlookin­g Lake Hawea.

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