McConnell Property’s Titanium Park has been the driving force behind Hamilton International Airport’s business zone, and to help manage future industrial growth in the area, we will be helping to improve existing transport routes.
Teaming up with the New Zealand Transport Agency (NZTA), Titanium Park will be helping to fund a new roundabout connecting State Highway 3 and State Highway 21, as well as contributing to a southward-facing road leading off the roundabout.
The acclaimed industrial development Titanium Park, for which we are a partner property developer, is in the media again this month. FTD Magazine (Freight and Logistics) has featured Titanium Park as a strategic development in the heart of the illustrious Golden Triangle.
The Park is already home to a number of high profile, high growth businesses including Torpedo 7, Shaw’s Wire Ropes, CTC Aviation, Air New Zealand and Pacific Aerospace - and by its completion date in 2022, around 3000 people will be working onsite.
At McConnell Property, we take a wide ranging view of property development, and that includes offering advice on how investing in local developments can provide long term growth and maximum return.
In a recent special reporton commercial property in the NBR, our Senior Development Managers Aidan Donnelly and Scott McCulloch offered useful commentary on:
*This article originally appeared in New Zealand Construction News*
What do a wire rope distributor, aircraft designer and builder, and aviation training facility have in common? For Shaw’s Wire Ropes, Pacific Aerospace and CTC Aviation the answer is simple: location, location, location.
Auckland businesses are increasingly looking to set up shop in Hamilton.
Hamilton City Council's events and economic development general manager Sean Murray said there was a "definite move" by Auckland businesses to relocate or expand to Hamilton.
He was aware of up to four Auckland enterprises actively looking at Hamilton but believed the total number was much higher. "This drift is real and it's not to say businesses don't like Auckland.