The New Zealand Herald

Housing solutions for Aucklander­s

- Caroline Butterwort­h is Ka¯inga Ora deputy chief executive, Auckland and Northland.

Auckland has always been an attractive place to live. The name Ta¯maki Makaurau literally means “Ta¯maki, desired by many”. Already home to one-in-three people living in New Zealand, Statistics NZ projects Auckland’s population to hit 2 million somewhere around 2030.

Significan­tly, within a few years of that milestone, the number of Aucklander­s aged 65+ will exceed the number of children aged 0-14, and the 40-64 age group will become the largest overall.

In addition Auckland’s attractive­ness to, and need for, workers from around the world is set to re-intensify as internatio­nal borders reopen postpandem­ic. This will bring in people who don’t necessaril­y view the ideal city home as a single storey bungalow with a backyard.

Auckland, just a couple of America’s Cup defences from now, will be noticeably more populous, older, and more ethnically diverse. This means the way Aucklander­s want to live, work and move about the city will continue to change with the demographi­cs.

These sorts of challenges are one reason Ka¯inga Ora — the agency which replaced Housing New Zealand, KiwiBuild, and the Crown’s large-scale residentia­l developer HLC — was establishe­d in 2019.

The Auckland Housing Programme, which began in 2016, has already delivered about 4500 public homes, on top of hundreds of market and affordable homes delivered mostly through private developers purchasing build-ready land. The early phases of that programme have relied on Crown agencies using primarily their own land, their own

Ka¯inga Ora — Homes and Communitie­s is using the scale of its building programme, and its mandate to find willing partners, to shape urban developmen­t in Auckland for decades to come, writes Caroline Butterwort­h

borrowing and their own future rental income to fund and build the new homes.

This has been possible in areas where public housing was already well-establishe­d — such as Mt Roskill or Avondale — or, in the case of Hobsonvill­e Point, where a large area of defence land was surplus to requiremen­ts. But redevelopi­ng the neighbourh­oods with large areas of Crown-owned land doesn’t go far enough to properly equip Auckland for the decades ahead.

Getting the right mix of housing across all of Auckland requires a bigger picture mentality, and a willingnes­s to collaborat­e.

That means continuing to deliver plenty of warm, dry, environmen­tally-efficient public housing at pace, whil working with local government, iwi and other Ma¯ori organisati­ons, private developers, the constructi­on industry and community housing providers to find solutions in the private housing market to ensure Auckland grows in the right way.

One example of how Ka¯inga Ora can positively influence Auckland’s future direction is through our relationsh­ip with the constructi­on sector. Acting as Auckland’s largest and most durable residentia­l developer, rather than as just another client of the sector, Ka¯inga Ora is looking to increase predictabi­lity of future work by publishing our pipeline of future building intentions, and effectivel­y contractin­g work in bulk through longterm agreements with build partners.

We also work alongside school and tertiary training programmes to provide meaningful work experience and apprentice­ship opportunit­ies for students in places like Massey High School, where trades students build houses that will become homes for Ka¯inga Ora customers in Auckland.

In the near future, Ka¯inga Ora will release plans to boost offsite manufactur­e of new homes. Offsite manufactur­e has massive potential to speed up constructi­on, reduce costs, and improve building site safety. Local manufactur­ing capacity is being held back, partly because there is no guarantee of demand for anyone who takes the risk on building the assembly lines needed.

By publishing informatio­n about the type and location of future homes, as well as potential to partner up to deliver more offsite manufactur­ed developmen­ts, Ka¯inga Ora can help investors and manufactur­ers have confidence that the demand will be there for their product.

Auckland is far from alone in having problems accommodat­ing growth and ensuring access to quality housing for everyone, but it has challenges that don’t affect other regions to the same extent. For instance, transport makes up about 40 per cent of Auckland’s carbon emissions, and the infrastruc­ture burden from growing ever outwards is becoming unsustaina­ble. That means the onus is on Ka¯inga Ora and other central and local government players to plan communitie­s where people can live, work, and play without total dependence on cars.

It also means creating deep and lasting relationsh­ips with mana whenua and the communitie­s where we hope to accommodat­e the newest Aucklander­s in the coming decades, to ensure Ta¯maki Makaurau remains desired by many.

Auckland, just a couple of America’s Cup defences from now, will be noticeably more populous, older, and more ethnically diverse. This means the way Aucklander­s want to live, work and move about the city will continue to change with the demographi­cs.

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