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In 2014, Mike Pero Real Estate was ranked 23rd in the Deloitte Fast 50 with 327.8% growth, which placed it 6th in the category of ‘Retail or consumer product’. [ 8 ] Pero was a founding member of the NZ Mortgage Brokers Association and recognised for his services to the Mortgage Broking Industry of New Zealand – he was the first recipient ...
Barfoot & Thompson is New Zealand's largest privately owned, non-franchised real estate company, based in Auckland, New Zealand.The company is family owned and operated and is still run by the same Barfoot and Thompson families that started the business in the 1920s.
Real estate companies of New Zealand (4 P) S. Stuff (company) (16 P) Pages in category "Real estate in New Zealand" This category contains only the following page.
House Hunt is a New Zealand reality television series about the New Zealand property market, which follows house-hunters looking to buy property. [1] [2] It airs on TV One. [3] Series director Robyn Paterson spoke on the Breakfast with Brian Kelly program on the Coast radio network in June 2015, just before the series aired. [4]
When records began in 1974, new homes in New Zealand had an average floor area of 120 m 2 (1,290 sq ft). Average new home sizes rose to peak at 200 m 2 (2,150 sq ft) in 2010, before falling to 158 m 2 (1,700 sq ft) in 2019. [17] In 1966 the New Zealand Encyclopedia recognised seven basic designs of New Zealand houses. [18]
Pages in category "Real estate companies of New Zealand" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
The Real Estate Authority (REA), formerly the Real Estate Agents Authority (REAA), is the New Zealand Crown entity responsible for the regulation of the New Zealand real estate industry as well as the agents within it. [4]
New Zealand society as a whole continues to dream the dream of owner-occupied home-ownership despite changing economic and environmental conditions. The local real-estate sector promotes myths of moving onto (and up) the property ladder [9] accordingly, and New Zealand politicians foster the idea of a stable democracy rooted in property-ownership.