The New Zealand Herald

Consent process begins for $200m tower block

- Anne Gibson property editor anne.gibson@nzherald.co.nz Edited by Anne Gibson anne.gibson@nzherald.co.nz

Consent is being sought for the first tower to rise above the North Shore’s Milford Centre where units will sell from $1 million-plus.

Campbell Barbour, NZ Retail Property Group (NZRPG) general manager, said resource consent had been applied for with Auckland Council for the $200 million-plus retail/apartment tower above the mall’s carpark on the Milford Rd/Ihumata Rd corner near the waterfront.

The consent will be processed on a fully notified basis, giving residents and others the right to make submission­s on the plans, Barbour said.

The first block will be 11 levels, with a lower podium at the intersecti­on and four levels of carparking.

The first image has been released of that block and Barbour said that followed NZRPG’s successful plan change applicatio­n which allowed for a change of use of the land and set the framework for apartment developmen­t and tower heights.

Barbour said notificati­on was needed due to the configurat­ion of the buildings on the site which was outside the district plan rules.

Units in the first block would be up to 120sq m, sold with up to two carparking spaces, and a swimming pool would be developed “so this is resort-style — these apartments are $1 million-plus each”, Barbour said.

Twenty shops will be included in a 3000sq m area in the new block.

Neighbours, including the Milford Residents Associatio­n, strongly opposed the apartment and mall expansion plans where NZRPG initially sought to build towers up to 16 levels in the area zoned for two to four levels. Residents said the towers were inappropri­ate for the area and resident William McCandless told the Environmen­t Court in 2013 he was “gobsmacked” developer Milford Centre would propose 64m-high towers when the height trigger was only 11m.

“I am not comfortabl­e with 500-plus new residents living on the same site as the shopping mall that is closed at night and in a town where there is no entertainm­ent, sports fields, infrastruc­ture or a police station to police them,” McCandless said.

Bronwyn Carruthers for Milford Centre told the court the suburb was identified as a prime location for intensific­ation, developing 250 units was appropriat­e and negative effects could be managed.

A second tower is planned, then Milford Centre said it would seek a change to the district plan to allow a third developmen­t stage.

It would seek Auckland Council approval of building design and constructi­on details.

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