CORRECT: NZ residential building consents boosted by planned apartments in Feb
(Fixes size of percentage increase in 3rd paragraph)
By Paul McBeth
March 29 (BusinessDesk) - New Zealand residential building consents were boosted by a glut of planned Auckland
apartments last month, hitting a record for a February month.
Residential permits rose a seasonally adjusted 1.9 percent to 3,307 in the month of February, Stats NZ said. That was
despite a 0.5 percent decline in new permits for houses at 1,885.
In actual terms, there were 3,098 new residential consents in February, up 28 percent from a year earlier, and the most
consented in a February month since records began in 1966. New apartment consents more than tripled to 446 from a year
earlier, of which 419 were in Auckland.
"This month’s growth was driven mainly by apartments in Auckland which are volatile month to month," construction
statistics manager Melissa McKenzie said.
There were 1,354 new residential building consents in Auckland, up from 779 a year earlier. Canterbury recorded the
second-highest number of consents at 448, up from 375 a year earlier.
New Zealand's building sector remains inundated with work, despite an escalation in costs eroding profit margins and
tipping several firms into liquidation or receivership.
Annual residential building consents were up 9.7 percent at 34,262 in the 12 months through February. Of that, permits
for new houses were up 1.7 percent at 21,420, apartments rose 29 percent to 4,070, retirement village units climbed 11
percent to 2,157, and townhouses, flats and units increased 30 percent to 6,615.
McKenzie said the number of new homes being consented annually was at a 44-year high, though still below the peak
building period in the mid-1970s. And in the latest boom, New Zealand’s population rose from about 3 million to 4.9
million, she said.
Demand for new construction isn't limited to residential building. The value of non-residential work was up 13 percent
at $596 million in the month of February from a year earlier, with 287,000 square metres up 9.9 percent from a year
earlier.
Non-residential work permitted totalled $7.18 billion in the year through February, up 6.2 percent from a year earlier,
and spanning 3.52 million sqm, an increase of 18 percent from the prior period.
Separately, Rider Levett Bucknall's crane index showed a record number of cranes in use across the country in the March
quarter at 148. That was up from 140 cranes in the December quarter.
RLB director Chris Haines said the record crane count of 98 long-term cranes in Auckland underscored the strong activity
that's stretching local resources.
"This pressure on resources doesn’t look like abating anytime soon, with Auckland’s significant pipeline of new
projects," he said.
Still, the ANZ Business Outlook yesterday showed those building intentions may be turning. A net 16 percent of
respondents expected to see a decline in residential building over the coming year, compared to a net 3.8 percent in
February picking an increase.
And a net 4.5 percent expect a contraction in commercial construction, turning around a net 4.3 percent anticipated more
work in the previous survey.
(BusinessDesk)