Replacing Kitchens During Auckland Leaky-Building Remediation

By the MTN Kitchens & Joinery workshop team · East Tamaki, Auckland · 2026-06-22 · 6 min read

23+ years in trade · 2,000+ kitchens supplied & installed across Auckland · Laminex NZ fabricator

How to spec, sequence and swap kitchens across many units during an Auckland weathertightness remediation, coordinating with the body corporate and recladding.

Quick answer

During an Auckland leaky-building remediation, kitchens on affected walls usually have to come out for recladding and go back in. The efficient approach is one standardised replacement kitchen repeated across every unit, sequenced unit-by-unit with the reclad so residents lose their kitchen for days, not weeks. MTN Kitchens supplies trade-priced volume replacement kitchens and coordinates the swap-out with the body corporate and the remediation programme.

Key points

  • Kitchens on affected external walls must be removed to reclad; plan the swap as part of the weathertightness scope, not an afterthought.
  • One standard replacement spec across all units keeps the body corporate's cost fair, defensible and repeatable.
  • Sequence kitchen removal and reinstatement to follow the reclad wall-by-wall so each unit is down for the shortest possible time.
  • Coordinate directly with the remediation project manager and body corporate, not 40 individual owners.
  • Trade volume pricing matters when you're replacing dozens of near-identical kitchens on a fixed remediation budget.

Sequence it so residents lose days, not weeks.

Auckland has thousands of apartments and terraces from the late 1990s and 2000s caught in the leaky-building legacy, plenty of them in the city fringe, the isthmus, and on the North Shore. When a body corporate finally commits to a weathertightness remediation, the external walls come off, framing gets dried out and repaired, and new cladding goes on. What owners often don't anticipate is that the kitchen frequently sits on an affected wall, which means it has to come out and go back in. If you're the project manager or body corporate chair running that programme, the kitchen line is a genuine multi-unit exercise, and how you handle it decides both your budget and how much your residents resent the project.

Why the kitchen is part of the weathertightness scope

In a lot of Auckland apartment stock, the kitchen bench and cabinetry run along an external wall, often the same wall that's failing. You can't reclad, replace framing or re-line behind a fixed kitchen without removing it. Once it's out, reinstating the tired original cabinetry rarely makes sense: laminate doors from 2002 don't survive removal well, and you've got open access to do it properly. So the remediation naturally becomes the moment to fit a fresh, consistent kitchen across the block.

One standard replacement spec across every unit

The body corporate context makes standardisation more than a cost play, it's a fairness and governance play. When the remediation fund pays for the kitchens, owners rightly expect equal treatment. A single replacement specification, same cabinetry, same Laminex decor, same benchtop, same appliances allowance, is transparent, easy to budget, and easy to defend at the AGM. Owners who want to upgrade beyond the standard can do so at their own cost as a variation, but the baseline is identical.

It's also the only sane way to run the logistics. Forty units with forty different kitchens is forty design conversations and forty procurement headaches while you're already managing scaffold, cladding, weather and residents. One spec, batched and manufactured together, is what makes a block-wide swap achievable. MTN Kitchens builds volume replacement kitchens across Auckland at trade pricing, which is exactly the model a fixed remediation budget needs.

Kitchen approaches during remediation (per unit, indicative 2026 NZD)
ApproachPer-unit costResident downtimeProgramme risk
Remove & refit original cabinetry$1,500 - $3,000 + high defect riskUnpredictableHigh - old cabinets fail on removal
Standard replacement kitchen (volume)$6,000 - $10,000 supply + install2-5 days per unitLow - batched, sequenced
Individual bespoke per owner$12,000 - $25,000+Weeks per unitVery high - no batching

The standard replacement path is almost always the sweet spot for a body corporate: a genuinely new kitchen, a predictable per-unit number for the levy, and a downtime measured in days per unit because the work is planned and repeated. Treat these figures as a planning frame and get a fixed per-unit rate against your actual unit layouts and reclad programme.

Sequencing the swap-out with the reclad

This is where the whole thing lives or dies. The kitchen removal has to happen just before the reclad reaches that wall, and the reinstatement has to happen just after the wall is closed up, lined and painted. Do that wall-by-wall, unit-by-unit, and no single resident is without a kitchen for more than a few days. Get it wrong, remove all kitchens up front, and you have angry owners eating takeaways for a month while scaffold creeps around the building.

  • Map the kitchen programme onto the reclad elevation sequence so each unit's kitchen comes out only when its wall is next.
  • Coordinate the strip-out with your plumber and electrician so services are safely isolated and capped before cabinetry removal.
  • Reinstate cabinetry only once the wall is reclad, re-lined, dried and painted, so the new kitchen goes onto a finished surface.
  • Batch-deliver cabinetry to a secure staging area on site to match the reclad sequence, not all at once.
  • Keep one point of contact between the remediation PM, the body corporate and the kitchen installer so changes to the reclad programme flow straight through to the kitchen schedule.

On a remediation, the kitchen isn't a renovation, it's a logistics problem wearing a kitchen costume. The unit that's down for four planned days is a non-event. The unit that's down for three unplanned weeks is a complaint to the body corporate.

Working with the body corporate and the programme

The single most useful thing a remediation PM can do is keep the kitchen supplier talking to the reclad contractor and the body corporate as one coordinated team. MTN Kitchens works to a fixed standard spec, prices the whole block at trade rates, and schedules install unit-by-unit against the reclad programme, so the body corporate deals with one accountable kitchen partner rather than chasing individual tradespeople across forty units. With 23-plus years and 2,000-plus Auckland kitchens behind them, that volume-and-sequence coordination is core business.

If you're scoping a weathertightness remediation on an Auckland apartment block and the kitchens are coming out, get the replacement priced as a package early. Send the unit count, typical kitchen layout and your reclad programme to the team on +64 9 265 1172 or admin@mtnkm.co.nz, and build the kitchen swap into the plan before the scaffold goes up.

Frequently asked questions

Does the kitchen really have to come out for a reclad?

If the cabinetry sits on an affected external wall, usually yes, because you can't replace cladding, framing or linings behind a fixed kitchen. Kitchens on internal walls may be able to stay, so it depends on your building's layout. We can assess this against your plans.

How long is a resident without their kitchen?

With proper sequencing, typically only a few days per unit, timed to follow the reclad of that wall. The key is not removing every kitchen up front. We schedule the swap unit-by-unit so downtime is short and predictable.

Who does the body corporate deal with, us or the owners?

We coordinate with the remediation project manager and the body corporate as one point of contact, working to a single agreed standard spec. Individual owners who want to upgrade beyond the baseline can arrange that as a variation at their own cost.

How is the cost split across owners?

That's a body corporate decision, but a single standard replacement spec makes it straightforward: every unit gets the same kitchen at the same per-unit cost, which is transparent to levy across owners and easy to defend at an AGM.

Can you match the kitchen programme if the reclad slips?

Yes. Recladding programmes move with weather and framing surprises. Because we keep one line of contact with the remediation PM, changes to the reclad sequence flow straight into the kitchen schedule so removals and reinstatements stay aligned with the wall work.

Get a trade-price quote from MTN Kitchens · Design your kitchen in 3D