The New Zealand Herald

NZ’s leading residentia­l builders revealed

- Anne Gibson

Retirement giant Ryman Healthcare is building more New Zealand homes by dollar value than anyone else, erecting and planning places worth nearly $900 million in the last year, a new report says.

Pacifecon Building Intelligen­ce, which researches and reports on activity in the constructi­on sector, put Ryman at the head of its national top 200 residentia­l builders list.

Ryman has a sharemarke­t capitalisa­tion of about $5.5b. Chief executive Gordon MacLeod said in November: “Four years ago, Ryman had a total of 16 staff dedicated to developmen­t and design. Today we have a team of 60, including specialist teams concentrat­ing on design concepts, constructi­on design, visual design and a new team dedicated to interiors.”

Pacifecon said Ryman had 39 projects on worth $899.9m between October 1, 2017 and September 30, 2018 and the average value of each project was $23m. Not all of Ryman’s work is residentia­l as it builds other village amenities. Ryman did not feature on the top 15 Auckland list.

David King, Ryman’s corporate affairs manager, said of the Pacifecon data: “We’re not quite sure how they calculated the numbers, but we’re certainly busy. There is a bit of an anomaly in that we don’t feature in the Auckland numbers, where we are busiest and have been for some time.”

Ryman completed three Auckland villages in the last year — Bert Sutcliffe in Birkenhead, Possum Bourne in Pukekohe, and Logan Campbell in Greenlane, King said.

“In addition, we have been working on two new large villages — William Sanders at Devonport, and Murray Halberg at Lynfield. We were also building at Charles Upham in Rangiora, and Bob Scott in Petone during the period they measured,” King said.

Ryman planned a further nine new villages in New Zealand, including at Lincoln Rd, and Hobsonvill­e in Auckland, as well as seven new villages in Australia.

“The reason we are so busy is we are experienci­ng strong demand for our villages and we’re only expecting it to grow as the population ages,” King said.

Pacifecon said Fletcher Constructi­on ranked second to Ryman nationally, with 264 residentia­l projects worth $867m but a much lower an average value of just $3.2m per project. In Auckland, Fletcher ranked as number one by total value. A Fletcher spokespers­on said the business did not know how Pacifecon determined its numbers so found it hard to understand the 264 projects and the average price per project. “Fletcher Living — not Fletcher Constructi­on — would consider ourselves to be the busiest builder in Auckland, and the third in New Zealand behind Ryman and G J Gardner. We are aiming to build and sell more than 900 homes this year in Auckland and Christchur­ch,” the Fletcher spokespers­on said. Pacifecon listed the country’s third busiest house builder as the franchised G J Gardner, carrying out $839m worth of work on 975 New Zealand projects worth an average $861,000 each. Grant Porteous of Deacon Homes, which owns the master franchise for G J Gardner, questioned the ranking. The business “remains not only New Zealand’s number one building residentia­l group at this present time, we do so by a significan­t margin”.

Pacifecon listed Changda Constructi­on with $744m worth of work on 10 projects worth an average $74m each as the fourth largest. Changda has projects at Pacific Heights in Orewa and Manukau’s Pacific Gardens. Retirement business Summerset ranked fifth with $741m worth of work on 37 projects nationally with a $20m average value, followed by Metlifecar­e (Auckland) with work valued at $679m on 25 sites and an average $27m/project.

 ??  ?? Ryman Healthcare chief executive Gordon MacLeod.
Ryman Healthcare chief executive Gordon MacLeod.

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