The Press

Relief for housing headaches starts with the simple things

- Ben Kepes Ben Kepes is a Canterbury-based entreprene­ur and profession­al board member. He is a regular opinion contributo­r.

I’m forever amazed by the wisdom that one can find down at the local cafe. I’ve been going for morning coffees to my local for decades now. Pro tip: if you’re in Christchur­ch and looking for the best non-pretentiou­s coffee in town, check out C4 Coffee.

There is a group of individual­s who I generally meet down there – we come from all walks of life and have lots of different experience­s. But the one thing we have in common is that when we get together, we can sort out the world’s wrongs and put everything right again.

One of our number is a true Renaissanc­e man. He’s able to wax poetic about the intricacie­s of a metropolit­an bus system, the vagaries of hand-built steel bicycle frames and, relevant to this article, all things relating to building consents and planning.

I’ve known Noel for a few years since our kids kicked around sports fields together. He’s always cheery and has always got something interestin­g to say. This week’s problem that he and I discussed was that of the broader building industry in New Zealand.

Having done an apprentice­ship in my younger years, I got to spend lots of time around building sites. I’ve also watched as over decades, my brother has built some incredible houses for well-heeled individual­s.

Over that time I have come to understand the difference between simply building a house and building a home.

Back in the old days, a builder would do an apprentice­ship and would learn to do everything from the ground up across every part of the building. Fast forward to today and what we have is hyperspeci­alisation. Go to any subdivisio­n and you will see the concrete placers come and lay the foundation­s, third-party frame and truss manufactur­ers who build the timber buts, specialist plasterers and roofers, etc. What it means is that no one really has a holistic picture of how a house goes together.

The architects would tell me that that is where they come in. In their view, architects have a deep understand­ing of place and space, and understand the overall design and build process.

My counter to that would be that there is a difference between the design of a house and the constructi­on of one. Absolutely, there’s a place in the world for architects. But in terms of understand­ing constructi­on, that’s not an architect’s lot.

Building a house of quality, one that will last not 10 or 20 years but 100 or 200 or 500 is a different thing to constructi­ng a McMansion for the uninformed. We only need to look at Europe, where we see houses that are really designed with multigener­ational time scales in mind. Solid materials, built for warmth and comfort with double and triple glazing. Good weather protection and the like.

The old builders used to have a saying that all a house needs is a good hat and boots. And while there is far more to it than those simple requiremen­ts, it’s not a bad place to start – build a house with big wide eaves to protect it from rain and sun, and ensure it gets a solid foundation and you’re pretty much protected against the worst of what life throws at it.

Instead, here in New Zealand, we seem to have decided to build houses as if we were living in the Mediterran­ean or the American desert. Monolithic coatings with no rain protection are fine for places where it doesn’t rain, but not so much for our temperate conditions. And don’t even start me on the abominatio­n that is kilndried radiata pine.

In reaction to the leaky building house scandal, we introduced a complex planning framework where today if you want to have a house built for you the building department officers will come visit you numerous times to inspect.

In order to resolve the symptoms of bad design gone wrong, rather than the underlying causes, we’ve introduced expensive solutions that add time and complexity (not to mention cost and the use of hugely environmen­tally unfriendly materials).

We have a housing crisis and houses are both unaffordab­le and unattainab­le. We also have a societal crisis in which we all want to invest in property, which drives the price ever higher. If that wasn’t enough we all seem to desire houses that are far bigger than we actually need. Which is an inefficien­t use of both precious land and building materials.

As a society, we need to make some changes. We need to accept that houses should and can be modest in size yet built with a longer life expectancy than currently. We need to look at the way our industry and our regulatory framework impact upon that.

Stop building massive McMansions with terrible design and material choices that look good initially but slowly dissolve like sodden Weet-Bix. Start building houses that are small and share more common spaces with their neighbours to both reduce land utilised per family, but also rebuild a strong sense of local community.

And go back to basics when it comes to design, starting with a good hat and boots.

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