
Power list: NZ's seven busiest house builders
The construction sector is the fourth biggest employer with 281,400 people: Poto Williams
The construction sector is the fourth biggest employer with 281,400 people: Poto Williams
Inland Revenue is owed $1.5m for GST and PAYE tax.
Kalmar is due to be finished in Parnell by 2023.
Apartments planned for prominent corner site behind cathedral
Results of the Herald's annual stock-picking game are in ... and the top picks for 2022.
"People unpacked and chose to come back" - Kylie Mooney, MC chief executive.
PlaceMakers said it would absorb the sudden price rise in the short term.
Pressure from logistics, prices, transport, shipping, lead times.
One manufacturers' product price will rise 27.5 per cent from February 1.
No rest home, hospital, gym, swimming pool, hairdressing salon or bowling green at Vivid.
Blockage caused by an empty plastic soft drink bottle in the sewer stack at The Pacifica.
What's the reaction to developer Chris Meehan's audacious NZX/ASX listing plans?
The Building Futures programme was just what 23-year-old Vaiana MacGregor needed.
New store could be as much as 3ha of retail space.
Winton expects to list on the NZX and ASX on December 17.
The application met the criteria for approval for a foreign entity to buy Auckland land.
"Re-emergence of Covid-19 has again subdued leasing activity and business confidence".
Company takes advantage of plunge in traffic to get on with infrastructure work.
The company has industrial, commercial, retail property including Albany Mega Centre
Each new building will have trees in one forest specifically dedicated to it.
"It's really sad. These sold out within hours off-market to first-home buyers" - Gibbons.
The block on Lakewood Ct has 151 units and is only about a year old.
'I was proud of the work I was doing with Kāinga Ora building state houses' - Ellis.
'It is absolutely horrific. It looks like a motel block,' says one neighbour.
Last decade, Leen was one of two directors of failed builder Collective Construction
First home buyers say they are being taken advantage of through the sunset clause.
The risk to buyers of developers using sunset clauses to bail out of contracts is rising.
Creditors named after Aussie shareholder calls liquidator when builder incurs big costs.
"You could understand and maybe forgive it happening once, but twice?"
Claim is also being filed against protesters to seek damages, compensation.