There's a moment, standing in a Heritage apartment for the first time, when you stop thinking about real estate.
The windows - original, heritage-framed, impossibly tall - pull your eye out across the city. The ceiling climbs above you. The light moves differently here than it does anywhere else in Auckland. You start thinking about Saturday mornings with coffee and nowhere to be. About coming home late on a Friday, stepping out of the lift, and thinking - yeah, this is actually my life.
That feeling has a history.
This building spent decades as the Farmers Department Store - the place Aucklanders came for everything, dressed up for, remembered. When it was converted, the bones stayed. The Art Deco craftsmanship, the scale, the proportions that modern construction has neither the patience nor the budget to replicate. What you're walking into isn't a renovation. It's a reinvention of something the city already loved.
Apartment 417 is a one bedroom. But one bedroom here means something different. Soaring stud heights and generous proportions give you a sense of space that most two-bedroom apartments in this city quietly envy. It's the kind of place where guests walk in and immediately ask how much it cost.
The building takes care of the rest - a rooftop heated pool, an indoor lap pool, spa, sauna, a fully equipped gym, floodlit tennis court, concierge. On a Sunday when you can't be bothered leaving the building, you won't need to. On a Tuesday night when you get home late and just want to decompress, the pool is right there.
Outside, Auckland is mid-transformation. Commercial Bay, Britomart, the Viaduct - all within a short walk. The kind of proximity that means you actually use the city rather than just living near it. The City Rail Link arriving soon. The neighbourhood getting better in ways that tend to matter on a resale.
Heritage apartments don't come up often. When they do, they tend to go quietly - to people who already knew they wanted one.
The vendor is ready to move and genuinely flexible - open to terms, open to a property trade, welcoming of conjunctional agents. If you've been watching this building, now is the time to call.