Local Govt | National News Video | Parliament Headlines | Politics Headlines | Search

 


Millbrook Resort still flying high after 20 years

Media Release Millbrook Resort
March 7 2013
Queenstown’s award-winning Millbrook Resort still flying high after 20 years

Queenstown’s multi-award-winning Millbrook Resort marked an important milestone yesterday (March 6 2013) celebrating twenty years since it first opened its gates.

Now employing almost 250 staff, the luxury golf and lifestyle resort is the largest in the South Island, contributing extensively to the local economy over the years.

Known the world over as one of the most picturesque golf resorts in the world, Millbrook is still privately owned by the Japanese family who created the development in 1993.

Founders Eiichi and Hiroko Ishii and their son, managing director Gota Ishii, together with Gota’s wife Miki and daughter Milly, are at the resort to join in the festivities and represent three generations of the Ishii family.

Eiichi Ishii said he and his family were “immensely proud” to have reached such a significant milestone in the resort’s history.
“Over twenty years ago our family’s vision was to create a nice place for nice people, a place where everyone could come and enjoy the wonderful lifestyle and surrounding scenery,” Mr Ishii senior said.

“Staying true to the land’s history was important from the outset, and we’re thrilled to have created an award-winning luxury golf resort while maintaining the beauty of the natural environment. Our coming of age cements Millbrook’s position as a trusted golf and lifestyle resort that’s stood the test of time.”

A special event to celebrate the birthday will be tomorrow (Friday March 8 2013) at Millbrook’s Clubhouse and attended by the Ishii family, Country Club members and other guests.
Millbrook receives numerous awards and accolades every year and has developed into a thriving resort set amid 500 acres of pristine alpine landscape. Operating a successful luxury hotel, award-winning day spa, world-class 27-hole golf course, numerous restaurants and conference, incentive and wedding venues, Millbrook has been voted the Leading Golf Resort in Australasia for three years running.

When the resort first opened in 1993, there was no health and fitness centre, swimming pool or spa, the golf shop was housed in what is now the Hole in One bar, it boasted an 18-hole championship course designed by Sir Bob Charles and accommodation was in a small number of Hotel Villas.

Fast forward to 2013 and now Millbrook has 147 hotel rooms, multi-million-dollar homes and a range of neighbourhood ‘clusters’ scattered around the existing and newly-developed areas bordering the new 27-hole course (the original Sir Bob Charles course re-configured and an additional nine holes added in the mid 2000’s by Turner McPherson Golf Design).

It has a purpose-built driving range and a number of restaurants, as well as new spaces catering perfectly for weddings, conference and incentive and other meetings.

It has its own real estate company Millbrook Realty Ltd to cater for sales and re-sales, and the resort’s success has been widespread with properties re-sold and new developments unveiled annually, including Taramea Square, McEntyres Tarn, Coronet Square and the recently released Mica Ridge.

Millbrook has also gone from strength to strength in 20 years thanks to its members, with some owners now living in their third or fourth property at the resort and second generation members coming through.

Millbrook Property and Development Manager Ben O’Malley said it was a wonderful achievement to celebrate two decades in business, through boom times and worldwide economic crises.
“The Ishii’s vision and investment into the golf course, its development and facilities was a bold yet strategic move to place Millbrook and Central Otago as a world-class golfing destination in Australasia,”said Mr O’Malley.
In the early years Millbrook were lone pioneers in New Zealand in this endeavour and the development was not without its doubters. Twenty years on the Ishii’s decision to invest has been vindicated.

“New Zealand, and particularly Queenstown, has a lifestyle appeal that is growing significantly in both international and national property markets. Millbrook, in its stunning Central Otago location, provides superb architecturally-designed homes that are beautifully finished within 20 minutes’ drive of a booming year-round destination,” he said.

“With every new development we have continued to enhance Millbrook’s reputation for quality and buyers have responded to that by continuing to invest at Millbrook.”

The future of Millbrook is bright, with plans to grow its membership base and to expand the resort to the west with more neighbourhoods over the next 10 years.
“There are no other developments in New Zealand that have Millbrook’s solid history and reputation. While our history as Millbrook Resort spans an impressive twenty years, our heritage dates back even further to the 1860s when Frenchman Peter Butel set about planting the now towering trees that adorn the property and constructed his farm yard with stone crofts in a quadrangle that is traditional in Europe,” said Mr O’Malley.

“Millbrook really has been 150 years in the making and is an iconic property known throughout the world!”
ENDS

© Scoop Media

 
 
 
 
 
Parliament Headlines | Politics Headlines | Regional Headlines

Full Scoop Coverage: NZ Budget 2013

Arguably Reassuring: Inspector-General Finds GCSB "Arguably" Legal

Of the 88 individuals:

• 15 cases involving 22 individuals did not have any information intercepted by GCSB.

• another four cases involving five individuals were the subjects of a New Zealand Security Intelligence Service warrant and the GCSB assisted in the execution of the warrants. The Inspector-General is of the view that there were arguably no breaches and the law is unclear.

• the Bureau only provided technical assistance which did not involve interception of communications, involving three of the individuals, so no breach occurred.

• the remaining cases involved the collection of metadata, and the Inspector-General formed the view that there had arguably been no breach, noting once again that the law is unclear.
More>>

 

Parliament Today:

Unsold Energy: Government "At War With Solid Energy Board"

Despite having known the scale of Solid Energy’s troubles for years the Government was prepping the company for sale just days before it cut 400 jobs and revealed it was in serious trouble, says Labour’s SOEs spokesperson Clayton Cosgrove. More>>

ALSO:

Special Schools: Salisbury Stays open After Court Ruling, Community Pressure

The Minister of Education Hon Hekia Parata met with Salisbury School students and the Board this morning and confirmed that Salisbury will remain open as part of the delivery of service within the new Intensive Wrap-Around Service, along with the other two residential special schools. More>>

ALSO:

Gordon Campbell: On The Government’s Trampling On The Rights Of Family Carers

Don’t want to be unduly alarmist about this, but we seem to have an outlaw government on our hands – if by that we mean a government willing to suspend the ability of citizens to seek the courts’ protection if and when the government violates freedoms set out in our Bill of Rights. More>>

ALSO:

Wellington Local Government Survey Results: "Support For Change"

Almost 2000 submissions have been received by the four Wellington councils consulting on possible change to the region’s local government, demonstrating support for change. More>>

ALSO:

Wellington.Scoop: Derailment Stops Wellington Train Services

A morning derailment stopped all Wellington train services for most of the day Monday. A KiwiRail spokesperson said the derailment had involved the 7.43am train from Porirua and there were no reported injuries. More>>

ALSO:

Salvation Army Report: Pacific Peoples Making Progress Despite Increasing Adversity

Co-author Ronji Tanielu says the report shows that while Pacific communities continue to face social, health, education, and economic problems that became pronounced in the 1970s, and in many cases have worsened, the Pacific community is tenaciously making progress in some areas, but struggling in others. More>>

ALSO:

Trans-Pacific Trade Agreement: NZ-Born Fair Deal Coalition Gets Global Makeover

The Fair Deal Coalition announces that it is ramping up its presence with a global publicity and education campaign that will raise awareness of intellectual property rights proposals in the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP). More>>

ALSO:

Gordon Campbell: On The 2013 Budget

We are apparently on track for a margin-of-error $75 million surplus, now in sight for 2014/15. But this sickly creature is hobbling out of the lab on the basis of all kinds of facilitative conjuring... With this strictly nominal surplus in sight, the 1984-ish justification for eternal austerity will have a news talisman: namely, getting Crown debt down to 20% of GDP by 2020. More>>

ALSO:

Get More From Scoop

 

LATEST HEADLINES

More RSS  RSS
 
 
 
 
Regional
Search Scoop  
 
 
Powered by Vodafone
NZ independent news