20 Sep 2025

Relief for neighbours as demolition begins on mouldy, abandoned Wellington home

11:56 am on 20 September 2025
Abandoned house in Khandallah

Gates have gone up in front of the decaying house. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Steel gates, warning signs and the start of demolition works outside a mouldy, abandoned home has brought relief to a Wellington street.

Earlier this month RNZ reported a 1980s era large mouldy, abandoned home on Kabul Street in Khandallah had been decaying for years, bringing a strong smell to the area.

One neighbour Paul Ash said it was attracting crime and had become almost "an industrial-sized puffball of mould spores".

The owner of the home was contacted by RNZ and acknowledged it had become an eyesore and confirmed demolition would start about 17 September.

Nearly two weeks on, the owner seemed to have stuck to his word with the house having had some windows removed, a wall taken away and large gates in front of it warning it was a construction site.

Abandoned house in Khandallah

Windows have now been taken out of the house. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

A homeowner on the street, Jenny, said people on the street would be relieved something was going to happen to the building.

"It has been in a very dilapidated state for a very long time and it needs to be pulled down because it seems like the only option."

Fellow neighbour Pat Glasgow had lived on the street for the past 19 years.

Glasgow said for the past year the smell the house had created was "pretty awful".

"It must be really damp and wet inside."

Abandoned house in Khandallah

The house had not been lived in for some time. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

She said that the abandoned home had let the street down.

"We'll be quite happy I think to see it down."

The owner of the home earlier acknowledged the impact the house had on the street.

"The neighbours have been very patient over the years," he said.

Wellington City Council said because the home was vacant and not an immediate risk to life it could not require the home's owner to knock it down.

Its senior health advisors had assessed it several times - with the latest being in June - and determined it was not safe to live in.

Police advised the abandoned home's owner it may pose a structural, health and safety risk, it attracted criminal activity and was an opportunity for squatters.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Get the RNZ app

for ad-free news and current affairs