The property, featured in Bayleys' latest Total Property portfolio publication, encompasses:
a 334.7sq m brick-walled church built on concrete piles with timber framing supporting an A-frame ceiling and roof up to 9.7m high. The rear portion of the church has two offices and two bathrooms; and
the adjacent 210.8sq m church hall relocated onto the property and used for scores of events ranging from Sunday school and Bible studies through to community group meetings and events. The hall has a kitchen and two toilets.
Adams said the property offers a number of owner-occupier or development opportunities, including, using the buildings in their present formats; reconfiguring them to suit the needs of specific tenants; and replacing them with a new, low-rise, retail-residential development having ground floor shops and apartments above.
"The church could also be reinstated as a place of worship for religious groups looking for an inner East Auckland presence," Adams says.
The St James Church property is close to a pocket of commercial premises serving the neighbouring residential community and including a Z-branded petrol station, the Orakei Community Centre, Orakei RSA, and a block of shops with take-aways, bakery and liquor tenancies.
Smit said neither of the former church buildings are heritage listed.
"With some 27 metres of street frontage onto Kepa Rd, and 33.5 metres of rear boundary adjoining Kupe Reserve and the Orakei Tennis Club, it's certainly possible the site could be occupied by an integrated building with shops at street level and residences above."
He says two big apartment complexes are under construction immediately to the southern side of the St James Church property – the 42-dwelling Outlook Mission Bay and the 41-residence Horizon Mission Bay.
"Land use intensification along the Kepa Road corridor has been a direct reflection of the theme outlined in the Auckland Unitary Plan – calling for residential developments in the city to go 'up' rather than 'out'," Smit says.
"The land use at 152 Kepa Road could certainly see that trend continue," he says.