The New Zealand Herald

Hopes for project after Ebert failure

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Negotiatio­ns are under way for a new contractor at the Union Green developmen­t on the CBD fringe after main contractor Ebert was placed in receiversh­ip.

Since the start of last month, the 153-unit apartment project at the Union St/Cook St corner has lain idle after the receiversh­ip of its main contractor, dashing buyers’ hopes as they saw no action on the property.

But negotiatio­ns are under way for a new contractor to finish the job.

Farhad Moinfar, whose Myland Partners is developing the site at 39 Union St site near Spaghetti Junction, said he hoped work would resume there soon.

“Dominion Constructo­rs have been engaged by us as preferred contractor­s, subject to contractua­l terms being agreed to complete the project,” Moinfar said.

“All going to plan, constructi­on could resume in October.”

In early August, builder Ebert went into receiversh­ip, shutting a number of large jobs including Union Green where workers were later able to retrieve equipment and tools.

Precisely when the apartments will be finished remains uncertain.

Moinfar said discussion­s on the completion programme formed part of the contract negotiatio­ns now ongoing with Dominion.

“We will advise buyers on revised completion date once this process has concluded.

“There’s still a lot of work before we can absolutely confirm a re-start on the site but it’s certainly looking positive,” he said.

Prices could not be increased due to pre-sale agreements, he added.

Marketing claims on social media pointed to strong pre-sales three years ago and a series of profiles with photos featured buyers’ Christian names but no surnames.

In 2015, Union Green posted on its Facebook page: “We’ve only been on the market for 12 weeks, but with more than 90 per cent of units sold to date, the team behind Union Green are celebratin­g the success of their sophistica­ted, urban developmen­t and the community that will soon call Union Green home.”

Buyers were “predominat­ely . . . owner-occupiers — from first home buyers, down-sizers, and everything in between”.

Early last month, Moinfar said the project was approximat­ely halffinish­ed, with work up to level six on the 12-level tower.

Equipment was being removed from the site by contractor­s after the receiversh­ip was announced.

Moinfar said last month there had been no problems with the contract. Deposits had been paid on about 95 per cent of apartments which sold “from the high $400,000s through to the low millions”.

A PwC spokeswoma­n said yesterday no new update on Ebert’s receiversh­ip could be provided. But the statutory report would be out in about a fortnight, providing extensive informatio­n on Ebert’s situation.

 ??  ?? How Union Green is expected to look when it is finished.
How Union Green is expected to look when it is finished.

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