Prime Minister opens Generus Living Group’s the Foundation retirement village
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon called for success to be celebrated more in New Zealand as he today opened Generus Living Group’s new Parnell retirement village, expected to cost nearly $500 million to complete.
“I think as a country we don’t celebrate things enough,” Luxon told guests and the residents of the new Nathan Residences at the Foundation where an occupation rights agreement on the penthouse sold for $4m.
The opening was in the historic neighbouring Jubilee Building on Parnell Road.
Luxon praised Generus director and founder Graham Wilkinson, saying he had contributed significantly by forming a successful joint venture with Blind and Low Vision NZ, formerly the Blind Foundation.
Together, they formed Foundation Properties which has developed Nathan Residences, the first of four planned buildings within the village.
“The vision and the way you worked with your partner here has been absolutely brilliant,” Luxon told Wilkinson and guests at the opening.
Generus Living Group, a private business wholly owned by Wilkinson, has six retirement villages. Those are:

“The company has focused on the upscale village segment for more than 15 years,” said Wilkinson who is also president of the Retirement Villages Association which represents owner operators.
Wilkinson told guests the inspiration for the Foundation was the Chelsea Barracks in London’s Belgravia, a redevelopment of Victorian infantry battalion residences.
The new Parnell village had been in planning for several years, he said.

The new vertical village neighbours Tāmaki Paenga Hira the Auckland War Memorial Museum.
The Foundation is in the block bounded by Parnell Rd, Maunsell Rd, George Street and Titoki St.
Two buildings on the site are category one Heritage New Zealand buildings: Jubilee Building and Pearson House, Wilkinson said.
So the challenge in developing new buildings was to honour and uphold the old.
Four buildings will eventually comprise the Foundation, of which only one new one has been completed to date:
The Foundation is not due to be finished till 2028 when about 250 people will live there “with development costs approaching $500m”, a Generus statement issued today said.
The new blocks will be behind the existing red brick 1908 Jubilee Building at 545 Parnell Rd.
That originally housed the school for the vision impaired as well as a library, dormitories, dining hall and kitchen facilities.
Anne Gibson has been the Herald’s property editor for 24 years, has won many awards, written books and covered property extensively here and overseas.