Urban Development Institute of New Zealand
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New Board Member Campbell McGregor

30 january 2024

UDINZ Board Chair

The Urban Development Institute of New Zealand (UDINZ)​ today welcomes new board chair, Harrison Grierson’s National ​Land Development Manager and Engineering New Zealand fellow, ​Campbell McGregor, after accepting existing board chair Dr Bernadette​ Pinnell’s resignation last week.​

Campbell has seen first-hand the good work UDINZ has achieved in growing the understanding of best-practice urban development in Aotearoa New Zealand. ​

‘’I’m excited to continue UDINZ’s work and look forward to working with the board to champion great urban design and development,’’ says Campbell. ​

UDINZ CEO Adrienne Miller is delighted with the new appointment and looks forward to working with Campbell and the board. ​

‘’I’d like to personally thank Dr Bernadette Pinnell for her time with UDINZ and wish her well on her executive commitments overseas,’’ says Adrienne of Dr Pinnell’s resignation. 

You can find PDF copy of the press release here.

Jasmine Bailey
26/10/2023 Ged Campbell

26 october 2023

UDINZ Emerging Board Member

We are delighted to today announce that the Urban Development Institute of New Zealand UDINZ Board has elected to appoint Ged Campbell of longstanding UDINZ member Watercare Services Limited as an emerging Board member on its Board. This is a discretionary non-voting member of the board.

UDINZ Chair Bernadette Pinnell confirmed that the board are delighted to have someone of Ged’s calibre, and who brings a utility perspective to the Board. Noting “infrastructure is such a key enabler in development, and we have not previously had the benefit of this perspective at the table”.

Ged’s role at Watercare is in customer experience, he has a proven ability to connect with people across the built environment and “a strong desire to see an effective built environment value chain delivering public value in Auckland”.

Welcome Ged to the team!

Jasmine Bailey
UDINZ Appointment of new Board Chair

15 AUGUST 2023

UDINZ Board Chair and Co-opted Board members

The new UDINZ Board met on Monday to (i) appoint a new Board Chair; from amongst their number; and (ii) consider co-opting up to three further Board candidates (in addition to those voted in by members at the recent AGM).

The board at that meeting: (i) unanimously appointed Bernadette Pinnell as the new chair; and (ii) selected three further co-opted board members being:

  • Andrew Crosby (Universal Homes);

  • Tracey Haszard (Beca); and

  • Kim Kelly (Wellington Regional Leadership Committee).

 They join remaining Board members (Bernadette Pinnell (Home in Place) and James Solari (Solari Architects)) and elected Board members (Steven Evans (Fletcher Residential), Campbell McGregor (Harrison Grierson); Hayley Fitchett (Kainga Ora) and Annie Wilson (Kainga Maha)), on the Urban Development Institute of New Zealand UDINZ board.

The board decided rather than appointing a new emergent director (a non-voting governance role for those starting their Governance journey) it would invite nominations from member organisations, for early career practitioners that may have an interest in contributing to the organisation. It is proposed to run that process in conjunction with the upcoming chapter nomination process. There is particular interest in those able to contribute a Māori or Pasifika perspective to discussions.

Bernadette Pinnell the new Chair said "We are delighted with the breadth of experience and attributes in new board and the quality of the pool of candidates we had to choose from”

Jasmine Bailey
News

1 August 2023

UDINZ Annual General Meeting 2023

We are pleased to confirm the appointment of the following three new Urban Development Institute of New Zealand UDINZ board members appointed at yesterday evening’s Urban Development Institute of New Zealand UDINZ 2023 AGM (from amongst 11 strong nominees):

 
plus, the reappointment of one of our existing board members Steven Evans (Fletcher Living)
 
They all join remaining Board members Bernadette Pinnell (Home in Place) and James Solari (Solari Architects) on the Urban Development Institute of New Zealand UDINZ board.
 
The new board will now consider co-opting up to three further candidates, an emergent director and appointing the new Chair.
 
The current Chair Lisa Hinton yesterday evening expressed her thanks to:

  • Christchurch-based Charlotte Johnson who has for the past two years held the position of emerging director (a discretionary annual appointment by the UDINZ board) and who has been instrumental in a number of member events held of late in Christchurch;

  • Kerrie Young and Andrew Crosby for their contributions to the board. Both were from organisations that were founding members of UDINZ. Special mention was made of Kerrie Young’s work growing an Otago Southland presence and Andrew Crosby’s work running and MC-ing various events and webinars, coordinating UDINZ working groups with Auckland Council, and running the highly successful Development 101 course;

  • Greg and the team at Vero Voting for their assistance with the voting process; and

  • Andrew TetzlaffKiara SupershadTessa Hill who acted as official scrutineers for the election process and to Danelle Dunn and rest of the team at Simpson Grierson who also kindly hosted both the virtual and in person meeting from their Shortland street offices.


An additional motion was passed endorsing and also recognising the considerable work and energy of existing chair Lisa Hinton who will remain on as a member, but is stepping down from her role as chair post the current transition period.
 
We look forward to welcoming our new board members at the next Board meeting and thank those who have previously volunteered their time and energy in furtherance of UDINZ objectives.

View the AGM recording HERE with thanks for Simpson Grierson.

3 July 2023

New Website coming soon!

We are currently working on a revamped new website and while that is progressed new content is best accessed via our organisational LinkedIn Profile HERE

19 August 2022

Auckland’s Development Pipeline

UDINZ’s first Development Pipeline event for Auckland was held last night at Simpson Grierson offices in the CBD. Approximately 115 people came out in the blustery Winter weather to hear from some of Auckland’s leading residential property developers about their pipelines of development work in the city.

The audience heard from Steve Evans, CEO of Fletcher Living, Andrew Crosby, CEO of Universal Homes, Pat Gavaghan, General Manager for Property & Development at Hugh Green Group, Phil Ainsworth, CEO of The Neil Group, and William Deihl, Deputy CEO at Ockham Residential.

Key takeouts were the surprising array of new masterplanned community developments either in planning or having broken ground across the Auckland isthmus. A key theme was placemaking, with our developers focused on creating places that have good connectivity, a strong connection to nature and the land, and built around how people want to live and connect with each other.

How people live both in new planned communities, and in well-designed medium density living in city suburbs, were showcased through the projects coming on stream. It is an exciting time for Auckland.

This is the first in a series of Development Pipeline events. As an industry, it is good to know locally what others are doing, and importantly, in what has been a fairly doom and gloom outlook, it was very positive to see that the urban development industry is vital, and on track with large, multi-year master planned community projects, and are making things happen in Auckland.

A big thank you to UDINZ sponsors for this event, Campbell Brown Planning, Stormwater Systems and Simpson Grierson.

1 June 2022

Board member Lisa Hinton represents UDINZ at UDIA National Congress in Sydney

UDINZ board member Lisa Hinton was an international keynote speaker at last week’s UDIA Congress in Sydney, talking to New Zealand’s housing supply and affordability. Moderated by The Australian’s editor-at-large Ticky Fullerton, the thing most of the Australian audience wanted to know – and feared - was whether Australia was headed in the same direction with inflation and interest rate hikes. 

The Congress was back on after two years’ hiatus, attracting approximately 500 from Australia’s urban development community. A highlight on the UDIA annual calendar, the  Congress is well known for its economic commentary and insights into what is happening in the residential sector, with the Assistant Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia kicking it off, and a line-up of international speakers, this year featuring Dr Parag Khanna, a futurist talking about the future of globalisation. 

It culminated in the UDIA National Awards for Excellence on Thursday 26 May recognising the best of Australia in community making, medium density developments, community infrastructure and masterplanning 

The next Congress is scheduled for March 2023 and is being held in Perth, Western Australia. UDINZ members will be offered a package to attend the UDIA Congress next year. 

 

22 October 2021

Supply Chain - cost escalation and pricing issues webinar

Well over one hundred UDINZ members across the country listened in to our webinar on Monday 18 October. Four panellists provided their perspectives on the implications of cost increases in the construction industry, supply chain frustrations and most importantly what you can do to ease the problem.

Matthew Duder opened the session with a review of a recent survey undertaken by EBOSS in collaboration with BRANZ; Kelvin Davidson from CoreLogic outlined the impact on the housing market; Shane Brealey provided a developers point of view; finally Steve Evans from Fletcher Living provided a solutions-based approach to the issue.

A recording of the webinar and copy of the presentation will be available here soon.


6 July 2021

Media Statement on Freshwater

From New Zealand Herald, 28 June 2021

Developers warn septic tanks overflow meets definition of wetland, hurting housing supply

By Hamish Rutherford

One of New Zealand's leading construction companies says a piece of land downhill from a septic tank meets the legal definition of a wetland under new freshwater standards and may prevent the construction of more than 50 houses. Documents released under the Official Information Act reveal the Government has faced a series of warnings from industry claiming the new national environmental statement on freshwater management could see hundreds of houses scrubbed from future developments because ground with little or no ecological value now meets the definition of a wetland.

Shortly before the 2020 election the Government gazetted a new national standard for freshwater management which Environment Minister David Parker said would "deliver on the Government's commitment to stop further degradation" of waterways. However, a new, broad definition of wetlands has already been blamed for the refusal to consent the expansion of a quarry, prompting the Ministry for the Environment (MFE) to signal changes to grant a consenting pathway for the aggregates sector.

Now Parker has signalled to the Herald that it may examine whether a similar pathway may need to be created for residential developments, as he acknowledged warnings from the sector raised "a genuine issue". MFE would look at new guidance to determine whether councils were over-interpreting the rules, but Parker said it was open to examining "whether we've over-defined what a wetland is".

Critics warned the changes appear to have led to unintended consequences which could reduce the supply of new housing. Fulton Hogan executive Graeme Causer wrote to ministers at the start of February, warning that the standards would have "serious implications" for the viability of Milldale, a large residential development near Orewa, north of Auckland.

Causer said part of the site "is only wet due to being downhill of a septic tank overflow and surface water in rain events" but was considered a wetland under the new rules. "It has no ecological value and no connection with any other water body and will become dry (other than when it rains) when the house served by the septic tank in question is connected to the reticulated sewer system we are installing for the Milldale development," Causer wrote.

However even after the septic tank is connected, the area "will still be considered to be a wetland under the [standards] as the definition of a wetland is linked to the commencement date".

The rules require there be no earthworks within 100 metres in any direction from a wetland, meaning even a small wetland could mean no building could take place over an area of approximately four hectares, Causer wrote, equivalent to around 60 dwellings.

Changing Milldale mean Fulton Hogan would need to exit its funding agreement for the development with Crown Infrastructure Partners, the Crown-owned company tasked with helping fund housing development.

A presentation by Fletcher Building submitted to ministers warned housing developments in Auckland and Canterbury were

Steve Evans, the head of Fletcher Building's residential and development business warned Auckland mayor Phil Goff in November that the impact on the housing market of the regulations was "significant and severe" and required urgent attention. Evans said the company had identified "at least seven" sites in its portfolios that would be affected, reducing the number of houses that could be built by 10-15 per cent. "Such reduction in yield is not only going to exacerbate the housing shortage further, but also drive up prices putting further pressure on housing affordability."

Parker has previously signalled that improving freshwater protection is a key goal of his political career. Even if the rules were too strict on what constituted a wetland now, the rules would not be moved too far. "There'll probably be a disagreement as to where that grey line [of what is a wetland] is drawn and it might be drawn too strictly at the moment but it's also perhaps true that it shouldn't be drawn quite as loosely as some people would like," Parker said.

The fix for the problem would not be quick, however, with changes to the policy statement requiring a similar process to its establishment. "When you don't get it quite perfect you've got to go through a near-identical process, which is quite complex, to fit it," Parker said. "I can't by ministerial fiat just do it, I've got to run a process under the RMA to do it."

Parker said the changes did not affect already consented subdivisions. If development was being held up "it'll be right at the margins" and the response he was planning was appropriate. However, warnings from the industry suggest work is already being held up, with developers holding off applying for consent or seeking to purchase land until the uncertainty was resolved.

Andrew Crosby, the chief executive of Universal Homes, said developers would be "stupid" to submit consent applications while situation remained uncertain, while sales of land for future development was being held up as companies grappled with how much could be built. "Land sales, from landowners to developers, have stopped. It's holding up development already," said Crosby. "We're looking at sites, right now, where the developable area is going down somewhere between 10 and 20 per cent. That means 10 or 20 per cent less houses on the site."

Retrieved from: NZ Herald

More speed needed in fixing freshwater rule so housing can proceed

The Government needs to move as quickly as possible to rectify a mistake in the National Policy Statement on Freshwater Management that could see many hundreds of houses unable to be built in new developments, according to Ian Pike, the CEO of the Urban Development Institute of NZ.

Mr Pike said that while it was positive that Minister David Parker had acknowledged the need to change the definition of wetlands in the NPS, it was imperative that the process be expedited. “Already we have seen developers changing plans and having to downsize or look at exiting new developments. This is at a time when the country is desperate for new houses,” Mr Pike said.

“Although MFE has said it will look at new guidance for councils, to see if they had been misinterpreting the rules, it is clear to the urban development sector that the definition of wetlands is restrictive in the extreme and in its present form will lead to a severe reduction in new houses being built.

“UDINZ most certainly supports environmental regulations to protect fresh water but, in this case, the regulators have gone too far, possibly in error. This needs to be rectified as fast as possible.

Mr Pike said that in future it was imperative that the urban development sector, which has to live with these rules and is the main suppliers of housing for kiwis, is involved in discussions with officials and ministers prior to rules such as this being put in place. “UDINZ was formed in the last two years to provide a platform for industry discussions on difficult issues such as this and we have an open door policy as far as central and local government are concerned.

“Our breadth of membership provides a great platform for consultation on both policy and practice and we want to work with councils and the government to find solutions that will enhance and speed up the development of liveable and sustainable communities”.


5 July 2021

UDINZ Board increases geographical and sector spread

The Urban Development Institute was delighted with the outcome of the board rotation process at its recent Annual General Meeting. Since its inception, UDINZ has been strongly represented in Auckland and Wellington. Two Christchurch-based new directors have been added to the board, which will make a considerable difference to our presence and impact in Canterbury and the rest of the South Island, and a new board member has been added in each of Wellington and Auckland.

UDINZ warmly welcomes (from Christchurch) Dawn Baxendale, CE Christchurch City Council, and Alistair Greig, Precincts and Urban Development Leader at Aurecon; (from Wellington) James Solari, principle at Solari Architects and (from Auckland) Kerrie Young , Director Strategic Urban Partnerships at Kainga Ora. Re-elected to the board were (from Auckland) Andrew Crosby, Steve Evans and Lisa Hinton and (from Wellington) Bernadette Pinnell and Fran Wilde, who has also been re-elected as Chair.

We have also invited Charlotte Johnson from The Property Group in Christchurch to join the board as an Emerging Director for the next twelve months.


18 June 2021

Government’s urban development policy statement NPS-UD – fast forwarding intensification in suburbs like Ponsonby?

Last night a UDINZ panel discussion Rezoning Ponsonby, held at The Sapphire Room in Ponsonby, saw an expert panel address an urban development audience of approximately 130 people on the potential implications of the National Policy Statement on Urban Development (NPS-UD) on the traditionally single dwelling zoned villa-laden suburbs like Ponsonby.

The urban development community and local residents attended. Many were unaware of the National Policy Statement on Urban Development (NPS-UD) which came into law in August 2020.

“It is set to have a profound and transformational impact on the currently single dwelling zoned inner suburbs of Auckland and calls into question what will happen with the Unitary Plan’s current character overlays over whole suburbs”, says UDINZ board member and CEO of Universal Homes, Andrew Crosby, who moderated the panel discussion.

Speakers included Urban Economist at PwC Chris Crow, General Manager for Strategy at the NZ Infrastructure Commission Geoff Cooper, Auckland local councillor Pippa Coom, Leuschke Architects Director Colin Leuschke and Herne Bay 1011 Co-Chair Don Mathieson, representing local resident views.

Chris Crow presented on what the NPS-UD is about, why national policy statements exist, what the intent is, and what the Government is now asking of councils in the way of spatial plans and demand capacity planning to enact the intent of the NPS-UD.

The NPS-UD is central Government legislation that has the intent of densification in our main cities to meet population demand. It directs councils to modify their city plans to densify suburbs close to the city, where people want to live, and which are ‘super ripe’ for development in terms of transport links, walkable catchment areas, and demand.

The NPS recognizes that housing supply has not caught up with population demand. It seeks to address unaffordability by decoupling land prices from housing through removing inflexible single dwelling zoning, and creating flexible zoning, so that 20 or more houses – or households – can be accommodated where previously only one could be.

“With house prices outstripping income levels, and young people effectively being shut out from living close to the city, this flexible zoning could have a profound effect over time on younger generations being able to live in or near the city”, says UDINZ board member Lisa Hinton.

According to Crow, “the 2015 Productivity Commission report identified scarcity of housing development opportunities as a major contributor to the rapid rise of housing prices over the last two decades, with unresponsive planning systems inhibiting needed development.”

“The report also showed that ratepayers and homeowners were incentivized to oppose growth and had “a disproportionate influence in local council processes”.

“The report recommended that a national policy statement could help address the constraints on development capacity in the resource management system, and this has now come into law.”

With the enactment of the NPS, councils are now required to adjust their town or district plans – in Auckland’s case, the Unitary Plan – to provide an evidence-based and demand-responsive planning regime.

Through the NPS, the Government is telling councils to unlock land supply reducing rigid planning rules (ie move from single home dwelling zoned suburbs to flexible zoning), increase density to six storey heights in city and fringe suburbs (close to transport or in walkable catchment areas) and remove minimum car parking requirements (MPRs).

“This could lead to far greater intensification in our cities, with 6 storey-or-above apartment complexes being built centrally amid the currently villa-laden suburbs who are effectively losing their blanket protections of character overlays and single home dwelling zoning,” says Crosby.

The NPS applies to all urban environments in New Zealand that have a housing and labour market of at least 10,000 people. Councils have 18 months to remove the minimum car parking requirements and two years to enable intensification through flexible planning rules.

“Currently we have urban growth that is unsustainable, inaccessible, unaffordable and often not linked to transport, infrastructure, services and amenity planning”, says UDINZ Chair Dame Fran Wilde. 

“In our biggest city, many people are forced to live in locations that are far from their places of work, locked into long commutes without public transport options. The NPS will enable densification in the places people want to live.”

Rezoning Ponsonby event sponsored by Harrison Grierson, Nest or Invest Developments, AV Jennings, Universal Homes and Context. For more information or media queries, please contact Andrew Crosby, CEO Universal Homes and UDINZ board member on 021 982 444 or andrewc@universal.co.nz


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4 June 2021

Government’s urban development policy statement – fast forward to density in suburbs like Ponsonby?

The Government is hitting fast-forward on its National Policy Statement on Urban Development (NPS-UD).

The first question for many is: what is a National Policy Statement and what does it mean? The National Policy statement on Urban Development capacity (NPS-UD) is central Government legislation that has the intent of densification in our main cities to meet population demand. The NPS-UD mandates councils to modify their existing city plans to factor in capacity planning based on population demand.

Government is effectively telling councils to unlock land supply from rigid planning rules (ie move from single home dwelling zoned suburbs to flexible zoning), increase density to six storey heights in city and fringe suburbs (close to transport or in walkable catchment areas) and remove minimum car parking requirements (MPRs). Combined, these moves shift the dial to enable densification in inner or fringe city suburbs, which to date, have been protected from intensification by character overlays and single home dwelling zoning.

The NPS applies to all urban environments in New Zealand that have a housing and labour market of at least 10,000 people. Councils now have 18 months to remove the minimum car parking requirements and two years to enable intensification through flexible planning rules.

“Currently we have urban growth that is unsustainable, inaccessible, unaffordable and often not linked to transport, infrastructure, services and amenity planning”, says UDINZ Chair Dame Fran Wilde. 

“In our biggest city, many people are forced to live in locations that are far from their places of work, locked into long commutes without public transport options. The NPS will enable densification in the places people want to live.

Councils – including Auckland – are now working through how capacity planning and the provisions of the NPS can be incorporated into their city plans, in Auckland’s case, the Unitary Plan. Will this lead to far greater intensification in our cities, with 6 storey apartment complexes being built amid the villa-laden suburbs?

If you are interested in this topic, UDINZ is hosting a Rezoning Ponsonby event on 17th June between 4-6pm at The Sapphire Room in Ponsonby, looking at the potential impacts of the NPS-UD on inner city suburbs like Ponsonby.

See https://event-9203-50c4.lilregie.com/booking/attendees/new
Rezoning Ponsonby event sponsored by


23 March, 2021

The National Policy Statement for Freshwater Management 2020

The National Policy Statement for Freshwater Management 2020 provides local authorities with updated direction on how they should manage freshwater under the Resource Management Act 1991. It came into force on 3 September 2020.

What it means for Territorial Authorities

  • Managing land use within environmental limits - especially sediment, nutrients and E.coli

  • Tighter controls on urban growth; less greenfield development

  • Tighter regulation of stormwater and wastewater discharges

  • Tighter and different regulation of drinking water

  • New in NPS-FM …

Every territorial authority must include objectives, policies, and methods in its district plan to promote positive effects, and avoid, remedy, or mitigate adverse effects (including cumulative effects), of urban development on the health and wellbeing of water bodies, freshwater ecosystems, and receiving environments.

Read more from MFE HERE

Two of our members have presented their views to Auckland City Council - Click HERE
Please share your experiences with this new policy statement - and we will make this available to our members. Email to info@udinz.nz


23 March, 2021

Government Housing Package Announcement

None of us reasonably expected a silver bullet. To that extent we weren't disappointed. There simply are no quick fixes to the decades-in-the-making housing problem. Solving housing availability and affordability requires a raft of carefully nuanced changes to our fiscal policy settings, financing mechanisms, infrastructural spend, education (of apprentices), immigration settings and ultimately an increase in the average incomes of New Zealanders as well as attitudinal shifts regarding home ownership.

No small ask.

The Government announcement is a definite step in the right direction. We will increasingly see momentum shift away from investors to first time buyers through changes to the Bright Line Test, tax deductibility and adjustments to government caps and grants. Government initiatives on the demand side of the equation will reduce investors' appetite for direct property. The levelling of the playing field starts - this month.

A significant $3.8 billion injection into infrastructure for 'build ready land' is a welcome move for local authorities and residential property developers alike. Kainga Ora also got a shot in the arm with its loan capacity for strategic land purchases increased by $2 billion. Similarly, support to address the shortage of young builders will ease the current constraints on construction speed and delivery. So, the supply side of the equation got some real attention too.

It feels like a sustainable and balanced approach that will gain real momentum and presents no risk of up-ending the market in the meantime. There was nothing in the announcement to address rental affordability. Indeed, an unintended consequence of the measures could result in less houses to rent with consequential upward pressure on rentals. This problem ultimately will be solved when demand and supply are more evenly balanced. The Government has indicated we can expect further changes, particularly to the supply end, in the May Budget.

Scorecard: a solid 7 out of 10.
Grant Robertson and Megan Woods have presented a politically safe and economically prudent move toward reaching a housing solution.

Read more HERE


12 February, 2021

And we’re off! Process for RMA reform announced and underway

The process of repealing and replacing the RMA with three new laws is officially underway. Wednesday’s announcement signals that the Bills should be introduced to Parliament by the end of this year. A priority for the Government is ensuring that the Natural and Built Environments Act progresses without delay, given its significance as the effective replacement of the current RMA.

Read the full article from Simpson Grierson HERE


FEBRUARY 2021

Urban Development in 2021: What’s Lies Ahead

Talk to anyone trying to invest or develop and they will have war stories of the frustrations and challenges they have faced. Without a doubt, undertaking development over the last 5 years – whether for new housing or commercial development, has become more difficult, with more risk, and with more layers of complexity.

Throughout 2020 we saw an enormous amount of policy activity in respect to planning and urban development. But what does it mean at the land development coalface? Does this mean we will see more housing, faster? Will it speed up investment and give us better and faster outcomes?

Read the full article from Veros HERE


August 2020

National Policy Statement on Urban Development

The Government has released its National Policy Statement on Urban Development. This has far-reaching effects on the future of our built environment. In particular, it makes specific provisions around car parking and residential building heights in major metropolitan areas in New Zealand. 

Read more HERE and HERE


August 2020

Resource Management Act (RMA) Review

The review of the Resource Management Act (RMA) by Tony Randerson has now been released. This is the most comprehensive review of the RMA ever undertaken and it has now gained bi-partisan political support.

Read more HERE


9 April 2020

Urban Development Bill hearings

UDINZ Chair Fran Wilde appeared before the Environment Select Committee by Zoom in support of the UDINZ submission.  Fran emphasized that the Covid-19 emergency had highlighted the importance of some of the principles discussed in the submission. In particular, she noted the need for developments to be framed in strong, integrated planning frameworks, for delivery to be a broad partnership involving the private sector at an early stage and for Kainga Ora to display speed and nimbleness in its delivery. Fran Wilde also noted to the Committee that the Covid-19 responses by the Government were an opportunity to ensure that the RMA was fit for purpose.

Please find our submission here: www.udinz.nz/submission


24 March 2020

Economic Update - Covid19

One of our members, from the Templeton Group, Chris Simpson (a former economic researcher), has prepared the following useful summary of the current economic situation NZ finds itself in, usefully compared with how NZ has responded in recent crises including the Christchurch earthquakes and the global financial crisis of 2008 - 2012. We are sure members will find this interesting - and thanks to Chris for making this available. UDINZ is happy to receive recommendations regarding relevant research, which , where appropriate, we will make available to our membership. Click here to read the Economic update Covid-19.


27 February 2020

Urban Development Institute of NZ enters into partnership with CoreLogic

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The recently formed Urban Development Institute of New Zealand (UDINZ) has entered into a collaborative partnership with CoreLogic (NZ) Ltd.

UDINZ was formed in November 2019 and its principal objective is to bridge the gap between the public and private sectors and to remove barriers to quality urban design and development throughout New Zealand. ‘We want to inform, connect and represent a bank of knowledge for great urban design, planning and development’ says Chair Dame Fran Wilde.

High quality design outcomes which result in resilient and affordable communities and respectable development returns is what UDINZ wants to foster. Research-led data is key to optimising the component parts of great developments.

CoreLogic is a property data and analytics company which provides information to the banking and real estate sector and the wider property industry all of which rely on accurate, timely and geospatial property data.

The partnership between UDINZ and CoreLogic follows the well established and successful relationship between CoreLogic and the Urban Development Institute of Australia.

Members of UDINZ will now have access to residential market trends from the most comprehensive property database in NZ, at national, territorial authority and suburb level.


April 2020

Announcements by Minister Phil Twyford, Crown Infrastructure Partners & the Reserve Bank

Government is forward planning and making available significant financial packages to support the economy and boost employment particularly in the construction and infrastructure industries. For ease of reference we include links to recent announcements in the links below.

Minister Phil Twyford

Crown Infrastructure

Reserve Bank of New Zealand

 
Jasmine Bailey