The Future of Building Sustainability in New Zealand


In the wake of demands for affordable housing and the increasing threat of climate change, the time for sustainable development is now. New Zealand's building industry is seeing a growing interest in environmentally friendly processes and products. So what exactly is a green building, what are the benefits and how is New Zealand preparing for sustainable building in the future?
What is sustainable/green building?
The concept of the sustainable or green building began in the 1960s. As part of the 'back to nature' concept, energy-conserving housing and office designs were promoted as an environmentally friendly alternative to traditional building design.

Green building is a flexible term used to describe a whole building process from planning to demolition.
Today the definition of green building remains diverse. It refers to the building materials, the processes used to create it and its lasting impact. Each aspect is required to be environmentally responsible and resource-efficient over a building's life-cycle. This includes planning, construction, maintenance, renovation and demolition. Green buildings make particularly efficient use of resources such as energy and water. They also focus on creating healthy, natural environments for people to live and work in.
Benefits of sustainable building
The popularity of green building in New Zealand has soared in recent years, and for good reason. The practice of using sustainable materials, processes and designs have a multitude of benefits for users and owners:
- Cheaper to operate over their lifetime: More efficient use of key resources such as water, land and energy reduces costs. Over a 20-year stretch, the outset cost of building sustainably is repaid around five-six times by operational cost savings alone, according to the NZ Ministry of Environment's Value Case.
- Warm and dry all year-round: The need for energy efficiency drives higher quality insulation and ventilation so a warmer, drier house can be maintained easily.
- Healthier and more comfortable: Improved levels of natural light and clean air alongside warmer and better-insulated conditions are beneficial to occupant health.
- Less environmental impact: A building that is designed, built and operated around sustainable practices helps to conserve both the surrounding environment and that wider afield. In a time of increasing threat to the natural world this is a significant benefit.
The New Zealand situation
For those in the building industry it will come as no surprise to learn that New Zealand is in the midst of a housing crisis. As of 2018, NZ has a calculated housing deficit of 71,000 homes according to the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE), while more locally Auckland and Canterbury are both in need of 15,000 homes each.
But alongside the need for more houses is a demand for higher quality. New Zealand currently has some of the most inadequately heated and damp housing in the developed world according to the Auckland Regional Public Health Report, and this is having a direct impact on occupant health. The The prevalence of asthma is astoundingly high for a developed nation and seems to be connected with the damp, cold conditions caused by houses lacking insulation.

