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2013 Census Quickstats about housing, which contains detailed information about New Zealand's housing stock, also reveals trends in the number, type, and size of the dwellings we are living in.
"The housing information released today gives us valuable insight into how New Zealanders are living, and how that's changing over time," Mr Meech said.
Joined dwellings, like flats and apartments, are becoming more common in our main centres, now accounting for 37.0 per cent of occupied private dwellings in Wellington city.
And, while the standard Kiwi three-bedroom home remains most common, the last 12 years had seen steady growth in the number of four- and five-bedroom dwellings.
It also found that more New Zealanders are using electricity to heat their homes and fewer are using gas, wood, or coal.
In 2013, electricity was used for heating in 79.2 per cent of occupied private dwellings, up from 74.8 per cent in 2006, and 72.0 per cent in 2001."
Other key Census points
* Average annual growth between 2006 and 2013 for occupied dwellings was 0.9 per cent - lower than in any other period between censuses from 1981 onwards.
* One in 10 dwellings were unoccupied on Census night, with the number of unoccupied dwellings increasing in every region since 2006, although there was little change in the Auckland region.
* Use of gas, wood, and coal as heating fuels declined. Bottled gas decreased the most, used in 15.4 per cent of occupied private dwellings in 2013, compared with 27.7 per cent in 2006.
Read the latest Census housing release here: