Subdivisions: Updates and Critical Elements - NDRS: Changes to Urban Density Rules
OND229NZA091
Description
Attend and earn 0.5 CPD hour
1.15pm to 2.00pm NEW LEGISLATION: NDRS: Changes to Urban Density Rules
The Resource Management (Enabling Housing Supply and Other Matters) Bill is due to become law in August.
It will allow medium density residential development in major urban centres without resource consent (through medium density residential standards (MDRS) that allow three dwellings of up to three storeys on a site). The law has standardised objectives and policies applying to residential zones across the country, regardless of councils’ district plans. Councils that implement the MDRS into their residential zones must include the objectives and policies prescribed in the legislation.
The Bill will result in substantial changes to New Zealand’s planning regime and will undoubtedly lead to an increase in the number and scale of developments in urban areas.
- What are these objectives and policies and how will they affect the work of a property lawyer?
- What are the minimum building standards considering no resource consent is required, and therefore neighbours might not be notified?
- What can you advise clients who now might fancy themselves as developers?
- What’s the status of existing plan changes?
- How are they affected?
- What cities do these changes apply to and can others introduce them?
Presented by Nick Kearney, Special Counsel, Davenports Law and Simon O'Connor, Managing Director, Sentinel Planning
Presenters
Nick Kearney
Nick has been in practice for two decades, and graduated with his Master of Laws in 2017, where he wrote a thesis on the role caveat emptor plays in real estate transactions, particularly following the introduction of the Real Estate Agents Act 2008. Today, he heads up the property team at Davenports, which has a broad range of property clients, including developers, investors and commercial landlords and tenants. He takes a particular interest in the law around the role real estate agents play in property transactions and advises a range of parties - vendors, purchasers and agents - on their rights and obligations under the Act, and in related areas. He has acted for a large residential developer of sections for many years and is well versed in the technicalities and nuances of subdivisions.
Simon O'Connor
Simon O'Connor is Managing Director at Sentinel Planning. With over 20 years of experience in the public and private planning sector in New Zealand and abroad, Simon appears as an expert commentator, featuring on Radio New Zealand, Newstalk ZB and in Property Investor. Simon worked at United Kingdom’s most prominent independent planning consultancy and Local Council Major Projects. He was responsible for large-scale residential builds, national distribution centres, shopping malls and apartment complexes. Simon shared his knowledge and pragmatic approach at Auckland Council upon returning to New Zealand. He worked as a Principal Planner in policy and regulatory divisions and was instrumental in developing Auckland’s Unitary Plan.