One would think prefabricated home-building companies would
be inundated with orders and have a bulging bottom line. That's why the
collapse of Matrix Homes, one of New Zealand's largest modular home builders,
has raised eyebrows.
The company's factory in Lower Hutt was opened in February
2015 by the then Finance Minister Bill English. At the time Matrix said
it would be different from other companies because, "we're turning
fully finished houses with code compliance certificates".
In the last three years it has built 100 homes. Clearly that
was not enough to sustain the business, which by all accounts was set up on
quite a significant scale and, one assumes, with high volume expectations.
There is no doubt building modular homes should achieve significant economies
(although it does have the disadvantage of having the overheads associated with
a large commercial building that onsite builders avoid). So why did it not get
the critical mass of sales it needed and expected?
In speaking to media, Matrix's chief executive and a
founding director said the reason for the failure was a "lack of orders
and slow planning regime changes…The rules were stacked against what we were
doing...The [Auckland] Unitary Plan should have been done ages ago. I'm not trying
to blame anyone for anything. It's just these things should have been
quicker."
No doubt Matrix was also hoping that having the PM open
their factory and say good things about them would help them secure the support
of Housing NZ Corp. Not so. "They kept delaying and delaying and
delaying and never bought one".
It seems Matrix learnt the hard way that dealing with local
and central government is fraught with risk. Government agencies are not known
for their speed and it would have been naive of Matrix to assume local and
central government would embrace their transformational approach to solving the
housing crisis, and foolhardy to base the success of their business model on
it, if that's what they did.
There is no doubt Matrix was ahead of the game. There
probably is good money to be made in modular housing and it may well be a way
to bring housing costs down, but the regulations will need to catch-up and
become more enabling, if that potential is to be realised.
Interestingly, I notice that there are now companies
importing container houses from China. They are converted 20 and 40 foot
shipping containers (which makes shipping easy and cost effective), fully
kitted out to the buyers’ specifications. The theory is great, and it would be
a serious option - if local councils standardised their consenting. The problem
is that landowners not only have to deal with the Building Code regulations but
they are also likely to be snared in Resource Management Act issues, given the
restrictive nature of Council Plans.
Health and safety
A commercial property owner recently asked me to sit in on a
meeting they had with a health and safety consultant to discuss their legal
obligations.
Instead, what they got was a sales pitch as to why an expert
was needed to protect the landlord from the "significant penalties that
could be imposed should they breach the law". And the cost was a mere
$55 a week - on a five-year contract - which the expert pointed out was minor
compared to the potential penalties! The expert said their service included
being present when tradespeople arrived to undertake maintenance, in order to
brief the worker on the potential hazards. I mischievously asked a ridiculous
question: Would he need to brief a sparkie who was visiting the site to
repair light fittings, to let them know the hazards of live wires? He quite
seriously said, yes!
This is of course typical of ‘experts’ jumping on the latest
government-created gravy train, and using fear to justify their existence. This
is what the Work Safe website has to say about a landlord's obligations:
"A commercial property
owner/landlord is a Person Conducting a Business or Undertaking (PCBU). This
means you have a duty of care, so far as is reasonably practicable, to ensure
the health and safety of everyone involved with or affected by work on or at
your property. This includes work that you organise or are responsible for.
Those that could be affected include tenants, contractors engaged by you, or
members of the public visiting your property."
They then quite helpfully, say that the steps that you can
take to meet your legal duties are straightforward. These are:
"Engage competent
contractors to do any work on the property. Once a tradesperson or appropriate
skilled contractor has been engaged, that contractor then has the
responsibility to ensure that the work they do does not put the health and
safety of others (including tenants) at risk.
Ensure any serious injury or
illness arising from work is notified. Contractors should notify us if any
serious injury or illness occurs while work is being undertaken. Landlords
should check this has been done (where they become aware of such incidents).
None of this requires
extensive manuals or paper-based systems, although property management
companies or landlords with numerous properties may choose to use documented
systems to keep on top of requirements and make it easier to track the progress
of work activities."
So no need for experts to tell you a load of self-serving
nonsense.
Frank
Newman, an investment analyst and former councillor on the Whangarei
District Council, writes a weekly article for Property Plus.
1 comment:
This is the penalty of a rampant out of control socialist bureaucracy which imposes new and complex rules and regulations to justify its existence.
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