Barfoot & Thompson celebrates the Lantern Festival
_21 February 2008
Media release
Barfoot & Thompson celebrates the Chinese Lantern Festival
Barfoot & Thompson celebrates the cultural diversity of Auckland City this weekend by sponsoring the Chinese Lantern Festival, Friday 22 – Sunday 24 February.
The 2008 Chinese Lantern Festival is part of Chinese New Year festivities which this year celebrates the Year of the Rat. The three day event includes family entertainment, overseas performers, colourful lanterns, delicious food stalls and crafts.
Director Peter Thompson says Barfoot & Thompson is pleased to reinforce its commitment to Auckland’s ethnic communities.
“Auckland is home to New Zealand’s most ethnically diverse population and Barfoot & Thompson is proud to have a similarly diverse team of salespeople representing at least 37 different ethnicities. Of our top 10 salespeople, seven were born outside New Zealand.
“Not only has Barfoot & Thompson helped a number of new migrants establish very successful real estate careers, we have also helped countless migrant families find their first home in our city.
“We have a clear goal to maintain our position as the real estate company of choice in Auckland and that includes being the real estate company of choice for the city’s many ethnic communities.”
Barfoot & Thompson looks forward to being part of this year’s Chinese Lantern Festival and will have a marquee in Albert Park for people wishing to find out more about selling or buying a home.
ENDS
Priority one: Regional Deal Strengthens Confidence In The Western Bay Of Plenty
REINZ: Buyer Activity Softens As Living Costs Remain A Consideration Across Key Regions
Better Taxes for a Better Future: Tax Policy Welcome Contribution, But Missed Opportunity To Tackle Wealth Inequality
Google Threat Intelligence Group - GTIG: Google Threat Report Warns AI-Driven Cyber Operations Are Scaling Across Global Threat Landscape
Commerce Commission: Baseline Research Report On The State Of Competition In New Zealand
University of Auckland: Junk Food Designed To Make Us Eat More, Study Finds

