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HOUSING CONSTRUCTION

“ MILK-AND-WATER POLICY ” compared with other COUNTRIES 1 Per Press Association. ] WELLINGTON, Oct. 19. “The present housing policy in New Zealand is almost a milk-and-water policy compared with the generous assistance granted in other countries,” said Mr Tyndall, Director of Housing Construction, in an address on the work of his department to the Rotary Club. Outlining some of the activities of his department which, although it was spread all over the country, was not yet a very big one because he had tried to utilise private enterprise to the full, Mr Tyndall said there were now about 1000 different designs for houses. The Government had said that every house had to be different and in that it was requiring something that had been done in no other housing scheme in the world. Variety of design entailed a tremendous amount of work. Recently, for instance, the Public Works Department had submitted a bill for 34,972 blueprints and in all about 50,000 blueprints had been made. Land for housing schemes had been purchased in 52 towns, and building contracts had been let in 30 towns. Houses begun, up to this week, numbered more than 700 and the department was advertising contracts for houses at the rate of 55 houses a The houses were not “workers’ homes” but homes for the people of New Zealand, as there would be no income limitation.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WC19371020.2.91

Bibliographic details

Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 80, Issue 249, 20 October 1937, Page 8

Word Count
230

HOUSING CONSTRUCTION Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 80, Issue 249, 20 October 1937, Page 8

HOUSING CONSTRUCTION Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 80, Issue 249, 20 October 1937, Page 8