The Post

Director buys more of Wairarapa

- SEAMUS BOYER CATHERINE HARRIS

and CANADIAN film-maker James Cameron continues to expand his south Wairarapa property portfolio.

In a decision released yesterday, Cameron was given a green light by the Overseas Investment Office (OIO) to buy 21 hectares of land along Western Lake Rd.

Cameron’s company T Base 2 paid a confidenti­al sum to the property’s three New Zealand owners, Maria Wallace, Ronald Lloyd Allan and Robert Stuart Anderson.

Mr Allan, a retired builder, and Ms Wallace moved out of the property this week.

The applicatio­n said the purchase was part of a larger acquisitio­n which the Cameron family would use as a residence and working farm.

The new property includes a large three-bedroom home on Pounui Ridge and extensive native bush, interspers­ed with walking tracks.

Because

it

is

near

another Cameron property, the Pounui homestead, there is speculatio­n it would make an ideal guest house for the Canadian director, or provide a handy environmen­t to work on sequels to his box office hit movie Avatar.

Cameron paid about $20 million in January for the 817ha Pounui property and a 250ha dairy farm.

In March, he added a 10ha lifestyle block, and in June added two further lifestyle blocks and a 13ha site containing several buildings.

In other decisions, Cameron’s new neighbour, American billionair­e Bill Foley, won permission to expand his Kiwi-based wine operation.

Foley, who owns luxury lodge Wharekauha­u, bought 80 per cent of the New Zealand Wine Company for just over $48m in cash and non-cash.

The OIO also approved an applicatio­n from famous French winemaking firm Compagnie Vinicole Baron Edmond de Rothschild to buy 26.4ha in Marlboroug­h for $3.7m to set up an ‘‘ultrapremi­um’’ wine brand.

Companies owned by Singaporea­n hotel entreprene­ur Michael Kum were also cleared to buy the site of Auckland’s Hilton Hotel for a confidenti­al sum.

Approval was given for a $110m Waikato windfarm near Kawhia Harbour. The farm is a 50-50 venture between the Maori owners of the Taharoa Block C and foreign investors, including the Chinese Government with 15 per cent.

And the stalled Gulf Harbour developmen­t in Whangapara­oa has been given a new lease on life with the sale of 31ha to mostly Chinese investors.

The land was sold for $35m by companies owned by bankrupt property developer Jamie Peters to Top Harbour, owned by Zhaobai and Rose Jiang, Shanghai Zendai Property, and minority stakeholde­r Westlake Investment­s.

A trust associated with New Zealand entreprene­ur Craig Heatley got the nod to sell half of a Canterbury sheep and cattle farm to an American, Calvin Pardee Erdman.

Erdman, who already owned half of the farm, paid $3.4m.

 ??  ?? James Cameron: New home could become a handy guest house.
James Cameron: New home could become a handy guest house.

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