Few children in Grammar zone apartments, surveys show
Auckland, September 13, 2017 - Apartment buyers will not contribute to the strain on Auckland’s double Grammar zone as the population in the area
grows, Colliers International research surveys show.
A report commissioned by Act Party Leader David Seymour from Property Economics predicts that the Epsom electorate is
set for an influx of at least 5,000 new school-aged children, putting pressure on local schools such as Auckland Grammar
and Epsom Girls Grammar.
However, Colliers International research suggests while residents of owner-occupier apartments are adding to the area’s
population, the number of additional school age children in the area will actually be very minimal.
Colliers International has been involved in the marketing of five large scale apartment developments in the area,
including Alexandra Park, Miro, Botanica, Botanica Heritage, and SKHY.
Of the 503 units sold, a total of 421 buyers have been surveyed. The surveys found 357 purchasers (84.8 per cent) intend
to be owner-occupiers, and only nine of these (less than 3 per cent) have school aged children.
The remaining 64 apartments (15.2 per cent) were purchased by investors who will typically rent their one or two bedroom
units to professional singles or couples.
Pete Evans, National Director of Residential Project Marketing at Colliers International, says very few of the buyers
are purchasing based on Grammar zoning or with the intention of buying into schooling zones.
“Our buyers generally aren’t families with school aged children. They are people who have had their children and are
looking for a new apartment in a more convenient environment closer to amenity, where they can get away to their second
homes more easily, or they are young professionals not wanting children at this time.
“New apartment developments actually reduce the proportion of family homes in an area, and consequently the proportion
of school aged children.”
Evans says the survey found buying into Grammar school zones was not a priority for the majority of apartment buyers.
“The purchasers we surveyed gave 12 reasons for buying, and zoning for Grammar schools came out at number 11, while
apartment design and size were number one and two.”
Colliers International’s research shows developers are continuing to deliver high-end new apartments in the city fringe.
“This signals a definitive shift from the traditional apartment model of investor properties and student accommodation
in the CBD,” Evans says.
He says that rather than overloading areas with more school aged children, Auckland’s Unitary Plan is contributing
towards urban renewal.
“The Unitary Plan allows people who have brought up their families in large homes to stay in the area by providing
quality apartments and allowing new families to move into their existing houses.
“New developments are gentrifying existing areas and creating more diverse communities by appealing to a wider range of
people who want to buy into sought after areas, especially in the city fringe.
“Developers are creating new high-end apartment dwellings targeting owner occupiers and these new developments mean that
existing residents of houses are able to stay within the areas that they enjoy – where they have friends and connections
– with open plan living, designer kitchens, beautiful en-suites, extensive walk-in wardrobes and luxury finishings.
“Recycling existing family homes, which allows new families to move into the area, is perfect for the seller, buyer and
the community.
“We just don’t agree with the assumption that children will live in apartments – it will take at least another
generation for a shift like this to happen in the mindset of Kiwi families.”
Will Coates, Projects Manager of Residential Project Marketing at Colliers International, says that where Auckland could
see an uplift in the student age population will be from the subdivision of houses in the Mixed Housing zones under the
new Unitary Plan.
“The new Mixed Housing zones allow for larger sections to be redeveloped or subdivided to make way for more densified
housing typologies such as terraced housing or standalone houses on smaller sections,” Coates says.
“It’s these types of properties that will appeal to families and drive growth of the school-aged population.”
ENDS