18 January 2019
A building boom is on the way for Lower Hutt, with building consents and applications for new buildings reaching an
all-time high.
By December 2018 building consents were up 18% on 2017 with Hutt City Council issuing 1500 consents. Council had also
received 529 resource consent applications up almost 45% on 2017 with many for new buildings such as multi-unit
dwellings and new housing subdivisions. For December alone 65% more applications were received compared to the same time
the previous year for processing by Council staff.
Hutt City Council's Helen Oram who heads up the consents team says the number of consents being submitted is a strong
indicator of economic growth.
"Building activity is good news for our economy. An upswing in consents indicates our population is growing, and that
more jobs in the building and construction industry are being generated. This has a significant positive impact on
people's income and spending."
As well as a rise in consents, Hutt City Council has also experienced an upswing in the volume of requests for building
inspections.
"There have been increases across all areas of development activity particularly planning and building inspections.
Issued code compliance certificates have increased by 36% to 1260. The number of building inspections has also increased
substantially compared to 2017 with almost 5,600 inspections undertaken. This provides people with certainty when they
buy in Lower Hutt that our building stock has been verified as meeting the requirements of the Building Act," says Helen
Oram.
General Manager of the City Transformation Team Kim Kelly says the increase in building activity is consistent with
Council's plans to increase the number of dwellings in the city with a goal of building 6000 new dwellings between 2012
and 2032. Council is doing this through a combination of greenfield development - expanding housing into areas that
aren't currently developed - and intensification, which involves building housing in existing areas.
Another way Hutt City Council has encouraged housing and other development is through its Development Charges and Rates
Remission Policy which finished in December. Developments that qualified were remitted the usual resource consent and
building consent fees, development contributions, reserves contributions and in some cases, rates they would normally
pay.
"The initiative has been hugely successful with 55 applications in the 2017-2018 financial year for 405 new dwellings
and 9 commercial developments. Since July this year a further 104 new applications have been received and we're
expecting a number of large commercial and residential developments soon. All up, that means it's likely an additional
1535 new dwellings will be built within the next 2-3 years which is good news for Lower Hutt," says Kim Kelly.
ENDS