The march of housing in Auckland continues The Herald ran a thoughtful but half analysis into the sudden housing supply boom under way in Auckland. Of course there … Continue reading The Summer Weekend Analysis: Housing
Looking at Urban Planning and Design
The march of housing in Auckland continues The Herald ran a thoughtful but half analysis into the sudden housing supply boom under way in Auckland. Of course there … Continue reading The Summer Weekend Analysis: Housing
While needing some loving I did find a surprise along the way When I do not forget I usually take pictures during the Summer break when walking around the … Continue reading Talking Auckland Summer Series 14/15 – A Stroll In The Park
Actually not a lot From Auckland Council: What Aucklanders want from downtown spaces…variety, quality – and lots of it Running and relaxing, celebrating and quietly contemplating the harbour … Continue reading Waterfront Auckland – What We Said
Investigation and Design I will do my best to keep you apprised of the Pocket Park idea for Lot 59 in Manukau City Centre. Recap: Pocket Park in … Continue reading Further Update on Manukau Pocket Park
Statistics New Zealand has reported that the housing dynamics as well as other indicators in Auckland are now pretty much unique compared to the rest of New Zealand. Of course and being a realist this is expected (even the negative indicators) in New Zealand’s sole international city of sizable comparison.
From Stats NZ
Auckland housing now very different from the rest of NZ |
Auckland’s housing has changed markedly over the past two decades as the city reacts to its growing population, with more multi-storey homes, greater density, and fewer unoccupied homes all making it very different to the rest of the country, according to the latest research from Statistics New Zealand.17 December 2014
Housing in Auckland: Trends in housing from 1991 to 2013 uses the latest 2013 Census information, showing that in the seven years between the last two censuses, Auckland’s population grew by 8.5 percent, faster than the number of dwellings, which increased by 7.6 percent.
Statistics NZ researcher and report author Rosemary Goodyear says the aim of the report is to give agencies working in the housing area in Auckland information they need. “We hope this type of information will be useful to both policymakers deciding where services might be valuable, but also to developers deciding where to focus their efforts.”
“We’ve found that since the 1990s, housing in Auckland has changed so much that it’s now distinct from the rest of New Zealand. There are more multi-storey dwellings, lower rates of home-ownership, more renting, and house prices have risen to higher levels than in other parts of New Zealand.”
“It is not only young people who have been affected by the fall in home ownership,” Dr Goodyear said. “There have been substantial drops in home ownership for Aucklanders aged in their 30s, 40s, and 50s since 2001.”
Dr Goodyear says Statistics NZ worked closely with agencies in Auckland to find out what information they wanted to know about housing in the region.
One of the key findings of the report is that since 2006, building consents in Auckland are lower per head of population than in the rest of New Zealand. In 2013, there were 358 building consents per 100,000 people in Auckland compared with 423 per 100,000 for New Zealand overall. However, the number of building consents issued for new dwellings in Auckland has increased since the low point in 2009 to reach almost 7,000 in the year to March 2014.
The report also found that dwelling density had increased significantly in Auckland between 2001 and 2013, from 85.5 to 102.0 dwellings per square kilometre. In 2013, the most dense area units (Auckland Central East and Auckland Central West) had over 5,000 dwellings per square kilometre.
“Levels of crowding have remained persistently high in Auckland,” Dr Goodyear said. “In 2013 almost half of crowded households in New Zealand were in the Auckland region, compared with just over a third in 1991.” Over 200,000 people in Auckland, including around 63,000 children, are now living in a crowded household. Crowding was highest among Pacific peoples, with 45.3 percent of Pacific peoples in Auckland living in a crowded household in 2013.
Read the report – Housing in Auckland: Trends in housing from the Census of Population and Dwellings 1991 to 2013.
—-ends—–
This shows with our Unitary Plan that we need to make sure our master planing document is not loaded up with anal development controls that restrict as well as make developments cost prohibitive. Flexibility is the key to make sure that both consents are available in timely manners and crowding is reduced through the supply of all housing typologies being efficient. Something again development controls bung up.
I suppose we will know how the Unitary Plan will shape out come 2016 when the Hearings Panel makes it recommendations to Council.
New South Wales Releases its own (Sydney) Plan After Sydney left Auckland for dead with a Transit Orientated Development that effectively paid for itself (https://voakl.net/2014/11/28/sydney-leaves-auckland-for-dead/) it seems New South … Continue reading A Plan For Growing Sydney
Investigation to begin Yesterday I blogged on an idea someone gave on Twitter about establishing a pocket park in Manukau City Centre. From Talking Auckland Pocket Park in Manukau? … Continue reading Update on the Pocket Park in Manukau City Centre
Maybe A fellow Tweeter had read my commentary on the Manukau and Otahuhu Transport Interchanges facing six-year delays (see: Updates on the Manukau and Otahuhu Transport Interchange Situation) and asked: … Continue reading Pocket Park in Manukau?
As expected although one had to try (see: Council Fails South Auckland – Again) the Auckland Development Committee has adopted the Otara-Papatoetoe Area Plan into operation this afternoon.
While disappointing as the Area Plan is now nothing but platitudes backed up with very little funding for most of the projects listed in the ‘5-year’ project lists any how.
I will evaluate the situation in a podcast tomorrow as well as other happenings that came of the Committee today including this:
One thing I will say though, if I do ever serve as an elected representative in the Auckland Council Governing Body technocracies is something I despise and that Area Plan would be fully reviewed and rebuilt – properly!….
Area Plan Watered Down to Platitudes in Regards to Manukau City Centre Today the Auckland Development Committee will be looking at the adoption of the final version of the … Continue reading Council Fails South Auckland – Again