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A 1959 flat by Ernst Plischke in Wellington seems to expand beyond its four walls

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Wellington’s hillsides are famously dotted with the modernist creations of one of Austria’s greatest mid-century architects: Ernst Plischke’s white or pale blue-painted, flat-roofed pavilions can be seen popping above ridgelines or attached to hills around the city.

Last year, in Thorndon – just a short walk from Parliament – I had the joy of living in a little Plischke gem. From the street you wouldn’t exactly call it pretty, sitting as angular as a shipping container above bunker-like garages at the end of an avenue of elegant bay villas and tile-roofed cottages. But as you enter, its sculptural, jewel-like qualities unfold: all timber and glass, connecting the interior to a peaceful garden. Comprising one large open-plan space (with a clever sliding wall for optional bedroom screening), plus kitchen and bathroom, the ‘Corner Flat’ is possibly the smallest home Plischke built in New Zealand. It may also be the last he completed before returning to Austria. It began as most homes above garages in this country do: as a granny flat. After years posted abroad in Washington and London, my grandparen­ts Frank and Lyn Corner (lifetime diplomats for New Zealand) returned home and bought a Georgian-revival style house designed by William Gray Young on a large, flat section in the central Wellington suburb of Thorndon. Though this main house came to serve them well, modernism was more to their taste. They had their chance in 1959 when my great-grandmothe­r needed somewhere to live in Wellington. This provided the excuse for a happy collaborat­ion with Mr Plischke, whom they’d come to know and admire, to create a one-bedroom pavilion above the garages. In the 1970s, after another decade’s diplomatic work overseas, the flat fulfilled for a time my grandparen­ts’ vision of music room and guest house – Wellington’s version of a Barcelona Pavilion, complete with a Mies van der Rohe suite, a Knoll dining suite, and even a baby Steinway piano. A decade later, the flat became my aunt Katy Corner’s long-term home, and a meeting place for Wellington’s art community. A long-time artist and contributo­r to publicatio­ns such as ArtNews New Zealand, Katy’s time in the flat saw it become less minimalist, morphing into a Wunderkamm­er – it was during this phase that, as a child, I first came to know the space. For a small dwelling it managed to contain more than you’d believe, Plischke’s ample built-in storage (a mainstay of Plischke & Firth design) accommodat­ing decades of collecting. Last year, I became the third generation to occupy the flat – and the first to have been bothered by the lack of a shower. (Mr Plischke seemed to have thought a bath was all one needed.) So it was that the flat came to have its only major alteration­s, to the kitchen and bathroom, under the sympatheti­c eye of Stuart Gardyne of Architectu­re Plus. This followed some careful double glazing and weather sealing of the south side by Ewan Brown of Tennent Brown Architects a year earlier. I am all too aware that it took a ‘millennial’ to suggest that Plischke’s design might be lacking something! Most of all, I will always remember my time in Plischke’s gem as a year’s education in architectu­re,

art and design. My grandparen­ts collected art throughout their lifetimes, gradually building a significan­t collection. One of the great privileges of living in the flat was being able to rotate the art on the walls, popping down the path to the main house to swap a painting or sculpture. Always, however, Tanya Ashken’s Carrara marble ‘Torso’ sculpture sat in the double-height lantern-like atrium, around which wrapped Plischke’s staircase; and above it, to the right, hung ‘Window’, a large oil painting by Ashken’s husband John Drawbridge. The flat is my own understand­ing of a Gesamtkuns­twerk, or ‘total work of art’. Inside, the normal separation­s between art, architectu­re, design and nature seemed to dissolve: Drawbridge’s ‘Window’ is echoed by the view of a tree through a vertical strip of glass; Plischke’s wood seems to merge with artwork frames; furniture and architectu­re come

Inside, the normal separation­s between art, architectu­re, design and nature seemed to dissolve.

to seem inseparabl­e. On top of this, Plischke’s built-in bookshelve­s were always stocked, completing the education that merely spending time in the flat was giving me (reading the first 10 issues of literary magazine Landfall from the late 1940s seemed an appropriat­e thing to do when my sister discovered copies stashed in the back of the bookshelve­s). The flat was a time capsule of 20th-century New Zealand culture, containing everything one needed to immerse oneself within it. Surrounded by trees and dark wood panelling, and with my choice of minimalist abstractio­ns on the walls, the flat became my retreat into a pared-down world of art and ideas (not bothering to install wifi was perhaps the best decision I made). We can travel to the other side of the world, to, say, the post-industrial Naoshima art islands in Japan, or to the Louisiana Museum outside Copenhagen, to find that very kind of world. That it could be found in a little flat above a garage down the road from Parliament was an ultimate lesson in the inspiring abundance of culture that Wellington and New Zealand offer. But time moves on; family needs change as generation­s roll on; and both the Plischke flat and the Georgian-style house were sold together in March, following the sale of the large part of Frank and Lyn’s art collection. As much as we wanted to hang on to the flat, to sell the main house separately from Plischke’s gem seemed a little like cutting off a third of a beautiful landscape by McCahon and selling the rest. Saying goodbye to such a special home intertwine­d with the life of a family was never going to be easy, but it is exciting to think of another family enjoying the way of life offered by this combined creation of Frank and Lyn Corner, William Gray Young and Ernst Plischke. That thought helps – as does excitement at the prospect of one day myself making a call to an architect. Only time will tell if I’m asking for my own house, or some help with a granny flat above the garage.

 ?? TEXT — Michael Moore-Jones ??
TEXT — Michael Moore-Jones
 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­Y — Sam Hartnett ??
PHOTOGRAPH­Y — Sam Hartnett
 ??  ?? Previous page The flat that Ernst Plischke designed in Wellington was possibly his smallest and last project in New Zealand. Michael MooreJones sits on the deck, which overlooks the garden.Above Tanya Ashken’s ‘Celene’ (1979), a bronze on a marble base, sits on the ‘1966’ dining suite by Richard Schultz for Knoll.Left Tanya Ashken’s ‘Torso’ sculpture, which is carved in Carrara marble, takes its place in the double-height entrance atrium.
Previous page The flat that Ernst Plischke designed in Wellington was possibly his smallest and last project in New Zealand. Michael MooreJones sits on the deck, which overlooks the garden.Above Tanya Ashken’s ‘Celene’ (1979), a bronze on a marble base, sits on the ‘1966’ dining suite by Richard Schultz for Knoll.Left Tanya Ashken’s ‘Torso’ sculpture, which is carved in Carrara marble, takes its place in the double-height entrance atrium.
 ??  ?? Left A partition can be drawn to conceal the bed from the open-plan area. The ‘Model 118’ sofa is by Grete Jalk for France & Daverkosen.Right ‘Pod’ (1988) by Ann Robinson sits on the coffee table. When it’s not on loan, ‘Window’ by John Drawbridge typically hangs on the blue stairwell wall. The ‘Florence Knoll’ sofa is by Florence Knoll.
Left A partition can be drawn to conceal the bed from the open-plan area. The ‘Model 118’ sofa is by Grete Jalk for France & Daverkosen.Right ‘Pod’ (1988) by Ann Robinson sits on the coffee table. When it’s not on loan, ‘Window’ by John Drawbridge typically hangs on the blue stairwell wall. The ‘Florence Knoll’ sofa is by Florence Knoll.
 ??  ?? Above and right Moore-Jones enters the front door through the street façade. The stack of boxes to the left of the door includes a mailbox on top and two larger boxes for milk deliveries; one for the main house and one for the flat. Inside, the foyer is open to the garden and provides access to the flat upstairs.Left ‘Untitled’ (1967) by Gordon Walters hangs on a hidden cupboard wall designed by Plischke.
Above and right Moore-Jones enters the front door through the street façade. The stack of boxes to the left of the door includes a mailbox on top and two larger boxes for milk deliveries; one for the main house and one for the flat. Inside, the foyer is open to the garden and provides access to the flat upstairs.Left ‘Untitled’ (1967) by Gordon Walters hangs on a hidden cupboard wall designed by Plischke.
 ??  ??

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