Sustainable Housing Essay

875 Words2 Pages

One of the key things for New Zealand’s future is sustainable housing. Sustainable housing insures that people have a roof over their head, and supports not only our NZ families, but also our tourist attraction and peoples appeal to our country. Our current home market system is failing, which means many people are not wanting or simply can’t manage with the way our housing system has basically crashed. The current ‘house crisis’ we are currently dealing with is a prime example of a system that needs a dire upgrade. To ensure that the market stays safe, we first have to make sure we don’t fish it out of the water and then suffocate it once we have it. The housing crisis has simply occurred because of these few reasons:

First, there has been …show more content…

Housing has to appeal for different ages, likes and interests. This means different sizes, different shapes and different housing options, (flats, apartments, caravans, sleep outs etc). This large variety of housing options in a neighbourhood should allow for people to choose the best suited home within the same community as they move through their life stages. Two-thirds of Auckland’s housing market are 3 bedroom houses, although half the house in Auckland are owned by people with only two people at most. Changing trends also play part, which tends to show that people want to follow the new thing which seems to …show more content…

Being in a safe, warm and dry house is to be what is expected in entirety. They also must provide a level of privacy, fully respecting the owner 's space. Housing is a huge element in health. Statistics from a building firm based in Christchurch show that the key determinants of health and there are key links between asthma and respiratory and contagious illness, and damp, poorly ventilated homes.Statistics from a NZ consensus also show today’s housing stock will make up over half of Auckland’s housing in 2040. There are around 432,000 undated and/or incorrectly insulated homes in the Auckland area. The fuel and energy costs required to heat houses to acceptable temperatures can be particularly high for lower income households. Those on the lowest incomes pay the greatest proportion of their income, almost 13% on household

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