Mayors welcome shake up

Te Kuiti Hospital

Mayors have greeted changes to how earthquake prone buildings are regulated – a move which will breathe new life into dozens of buildings in Waipā and King Country.

Across the country more than half of the quake-prone buildings will be removed from the Earthquake Prone Buildings register – about 2900 buildings. Around 1440 will face “more cost-effective remediation requirements” and 840 will require no remedial work

Auckland, Northland and the Chatham Islands will be removed from the regime entirely “to reflect the low seismic risk in those areas”.

See: Cambridge earthquake risk register

See: Ohaupo earthquake risk register

See: Te Awamutu earthquake risk register

See: Te Kuiti earthquake risk register

See: Piopio earthquake risk register

In Waipā mayor Susan O’Regan said a risk-based system made sense.

John Robertson

“It means we can focus attention and investment on buildings that genuinely put people at risk, rather than applying a blunt, one-size-fits-all rule,” she said.

Ōtorohanga mayor Max Baxter called it great news for all of New Zealand “especially for our small rural communities”. Waitomo mayor John Robertson told The News “at last some common sense has been applied”.

In 2022 The News reported the Earthquake Prone Buildings Register, held by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment, listed 42 buildings in Cambridge, 19 in Te Awamutu, three in Ōhaupō and one in Kihikihi.

Six of the most iconic were the Masonic Hotel, Museum and Water Tower in Cambridge, the Regent Theatre and Spindleys Building in Te Awamutu and the Clock Shop in Ōhaupō.

Rora Street in Te Kuiti where there are several earthquake risk buildings on the register.

Regent Theatre

Masonic Hotel front three years ago.

For Waipā, which sits in a medium seismic risk area, it could mean some older buildings – particularly in Cambridge and Te Awamutu town centres – may no longer be classed as earthquake-prone once the Ministry for Business, Innovation and Employment updates the assessment criteria, O’Regan said.

In making the announcement Building and Construction Chris Penk said cities and regions were losing the businesses, churches, town halls and classrooms that were central to their local economies and community spirit.

“For many buildings, the price of strengthening runs from hundreds of thousands to several million dollars. As a result, these buildings are often left empty and become derelict, making them even more dangerous to bystanders in an earthquake.”

More Recent News

News in brief

Plan boost An interim Environment Court decision released last week has been welcomed as “good news”  for 2800 farmers in the Waikato Regional Council catchment by its chief executive Chris McLay. The decision, related to…

New titles for road, reserve

A road named after a railway station closed for more than half a century and a village green which remains a green within a village, are set to be given new monikers. Te Kūiti’s Te…

Power deal is sun and dusted

A bright idea is set to help keep the lights on at the Ōtorohanga Kiwi House. Through the The Lines Company’s Power it Forward initiative, the Kiwi House is adapting to cleaner energy from solar…

Watertight deal signed

Waitomo and Waipā districts are two of the three first councils to transfer their drinking and wastewater services over to a multi council-controlled water authority. They will join South Waikato District Council in the transfer…