Residential construction has levelled off as much as
commercial construction has slumped in the Queenstown Lakes
district, the Registered Master Builders Federation (RMBF)
says.
Chief executive Warwick Quinn, of Wellington, referred to new
figures from Statistics New Zealand which supported what RMBF
has predicted for months - the small recovery in the
residential construction sector which occurred in late 2009
and earlier this year had stalled and levelled off.
Statistics NZ showed 30 new dwelling units were authorised in
the district in July, down from 37 in June. There were 41 new
dwellings in April, but the numbers each month hovered in the
20s and 30s back to a peak of 85 in October 2009, before
dropping down again to the early 20s in July last year.
Mr Quinn said on Friday the residential construction sector
was experiencing a healthier recovery in the main centres of
New Zealand.
"There's a sense the South Island's regional areas are still
finding it quite tough, with not a huge amount of work on. It
was slower to go into the recession and it may take longer to
come out.
"We're not through the worst of it. We've got a hard 18
months ahead before we start to see a slight improvement."
Queenstown tended to be a more volatile residential building
market than other centres, as it was heavily influenced by
overseas investment and tourist dollars, Mr Quinn said.
Demand for the construction of homes was a sub-set of the
wider property market, which was affected by how comfortable
potential buyers felt in their employment long-term, the cost
of money in terms of interest rates and how much banks were
willing to lend.
In 2003 and 2004, RMBF members nationwide worked on 30,000 to
35,000 "new starts" and were booked ahead for 18 months, Mr
Quinn said. However, in the past 12 months members were now
working on 12,500 new homes nationwide and maybe had one new
house in front of them each.
Mr Quinn was asked to comment on the state of the residential
construction sector in the resort, following the appeal by
Queenstown Chamber of Commerce chairman Alastair Porter for
the Queenstown Lakes District Council to act as a catalyst
for commercial development, in the public forum of the
utilities committee last week.
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