Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
You're listening to a podcast from News Talks be follow
this and our wide range of podcasts now on iHeartRadio.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Staying on property, Property owners and engineering experts are welcoming
the shakeup of the earthquake building rules that we're announced
by Chris Pink today. Government is limiting the kind of
buildings that these rules will be applied to. We concrete
buildings three stories or higher, all buildings constructed with unreinforced masonry.
Leone Freeman is the chief executive of the Property Institute
and with us high Leoni.
Speaker 3 (00:37):
Hi, good afternoon. You welcoming them too, Yes, very much.
So we see it as a common sense approach that
still continues to preserve life safety, which is the key objective.
But it doesn't leave our communities as ghost towns, which
is what's been happening with so many derelict buildings and
small towns in our biggest cities.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
How quickly, realistically will some of those buildings open up again,
like reading Cinema in Wellington, order the Amora Hotel.
Speaker 3 (01:04):
Yeah, it's I mean this legislation, this announcement today is
just the first step that so it will go through
and the legislation will be developed, and I understand that
the bill will be passed before the next year's election,
so it's still a bit of time to go. But
what it has done is, you know, it's signaling to
the industry what is going to happen, and so I
(01:25):
think that is a positive thing. When it comes to
specific buildings, you know, we still have to see what
the details going to to that sits under it, because
they're talking about creating a new assessment tool and we
want to understand so the you know, for something like
the reading cinema cinema, we'd have to wait and see
the detail. How many stories is that the reading sympt cinema.
(01:51):
I'm not not sure. I'm not a Wellingtonian, but I
think very highly. I don't think so. It might be
two or three years.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
So then basically it's it's all go, isn't it.
Speaker 1 (02:02):
No?
Speaker 3 (02:03):
You know, they've still got to do the assessment because
what they're trying to do with this is they want
to focus on the high risk buildings. And I can't
comment on the reading cinema to see whether it's high
risk or not, so I'm not making any comment on that.
But what it is doing is saying instead of having
a blanket rule which sort of covers everybody and everything.
(02:23):
They're saying, we're going to be a lot more nuanced,
and it's going to be you know, whether an urban
center or a smaller town, whether it's three stories plus,
which probably the reading cinema is, and if you've got
an unreinforced masonry building. So it's focused on really trying
to solve the problems that create risk for people in
(02:45):
buildings rather than a blanket approach.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
What do you think the impact on insurance will be?
Speaker 3 (02:51):
Yeah, that's a good question. Again, the more certainty we
can provide in the space, the better for everyone involved,
because because the rules have kept changing and people, you know,
you can have different engineers go to a building and
somebody says, oh, it's fifty percent of the in NBS
or new building standard, and someone else says it's seventy percent,
(03:13):
And then an owner might upgrade a building, but then
in a few years after it they have to upgrade again.
It's just created a whole lot of uncertainty and people
have just stopped and said, well, we you know, and
we've seen a lot more buildings become derelict, empty and
not being updated. So I think once we get through this,
(03:33):
then you know. The insurance premiums. I think you know
because they are targeted at what they perceive as risk,
and to me, this is part of that whole risk assessment. Leoni.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
By the way, have you caught up on this business
with the Dixon Street flats in Wellington?
Speaker 3 (03:49):
No, I can't say I have.
Speaker 2 (03:50):
I'll go and read about it'll fascinate you. Thank you
for your time. I really appreciated. Leoni Freeman, Chief Executive
Property Institute.
Speaker 1 (03:55):
For more from News Talks ad B, listen live on
air or online, and keep our shows with you wherever
you go with our podcasts on iHeartRadio