Homestyle New Zealand

Design profile

For makers of metal works Powersurge, quality and family are fundamenta­l.

- WORDS Claire McCall PHOTOGRAPH­Y Duncan Innes

Powersurge.

The family behind West Auckland’s Powersurge enjoy an enviable relationsh­ip. They riff off each other with such enthusiasm and synergy that it’s immediatel­y apparent why the business that makes magic with metal has forged a path to success. “We all have the same creative spirit,” says Andrea Harradine. “When we’re throwing ideas around, it’s easy — we never need to explain.”

Andrea’s other half, Todd Stevenson, launched the business as a self-taught 19-year-old who undertook a welding course after school and has torched his own path ever since. At first, what he produced was more sculpture than industrial design, but his innate understand­ing of the material has seen the couple work side by side for more than two decades now, collaborat­ing with leading New Zealand architects and interior designers to create bespoke pieces for commercial fit-outs and high-end residentia­l projects.

The pair has seen the mood move from clients requesting everything in raw steel to having a real passion for brass. In 2018, they drove a sea change for Powersurge to introduce a Home collection of products (lighting, mirrors, handles, shelving…) to make it more accessible to everyone. “It was a way to package what we were already creating, so we had a good feeling about it,” says Andrea. Still, when the online orders started trickling then flooding in, they were somewhat surprised.

Launching a collection has not only been hugely satisfying but also an evolution that underpins the business financiall­y, allowing the couple more freedom to pick and choose bespoke projects. It also contribute­d to an increase in consumer attention that led the company to expand into a new studio above their workshop: a calmer, cleaner, quieter space that puts their products on display. But it’s the shop floor that remains the beating heart of this enterprise, draped in dust and alive with the spark and grind of industry.

“We have an amazing team of artisan craftsmen,” says Todd. “Without them, we couldn’t have evolved, and as our focus shifts into product, their skill and dedication are integral.”

With Todd leading the fabricatio­n team from the front, elder daughter Ophelia King turns her talents to the

marketing. The photograph­er and Elam School of Fine Arts graduate was ready to head off to Berlin before the pandemic halted her plans, but she’s pleased to be immersed here now. “You could call me creative content manager,” she says. “I touch on all visual aspects of the business and have some big plans in the pipeline for how those will evolve.”

Yet this is no corporate structure with clearly defined roles. Ophelia’s sister Scarlett Harradine-Stevenson, a recent design graduate, also participat­es, working closely with Andrea to manage the online store. There’s fluidity, crossover, a lot of support. Such is the foundation that carried Powersurge through the GFC. “Along with sheer grit and determinat­ion,” says Andrea.

When Covid came, the family braced for impact. “But it had the opposite effect — people started to put even more value on the handmade and appreciate our level of craftsmans­hip,” she says.

To Ophelia and Scarlett, who are part of the generation that champions conscious consumeris­m, the appeal of the metal forms Powersurge creates is obvious. “People have more awareness now,” says Ophelia. “They want pieces that they’ll have forever, pieces with timeless silhouette­s that are constants, immaculate — and that’s exactly what Dad’s creating.”

For Todd, it comes back to the tools — making is integral to who he is. And he sees the possibilit­ies. “Being able to produce with my own two hands is how I work through a design. I can sketch a hundred ideas, but it’s when I start making that it all comes together.”

In essence, his family members wrap their skills around his to form a combinatio­n that has connected them with inspiring clients, among them interior designer Rufus Knight, stylist and interior designer Katie Lockhart, architectu­re practice Pattersons, and interior design studios Hare and Material Creative. But they don’t see the business catapultin­g into the mass market. “That’s not philosophi­cally aligned with what Dad or any of us would want,” says Ophelia.

Keeping it boutique, keeping it real, keeping it close. The formula is elemental. powersurge.co.nz

“We have an amazing team of artisan craftsmen. Without them, we couldn’t have evolved. Their skill and dedication are integral.”

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 ??  ?? ABOVE Todd and Andrea talk new handle prototypes in the studio. TOP RIGHT Pieces from the Home collection seen here include a Sun tray, Knurl pulls and Hex candlehold­ers. BOTTOM RIGHT A pair of Crease shelves display Knurl bud vases (top shelf, far right) and a shiny Halo vase (bottom shelf). On the right-hand desk is an Angle bookend and Crease card holder. OPPOSITE In this seating area presided over by Powersurge’s Arc mirror are vintage chairs from Babelogue and a Hestia table by homestyle Editions.
ABOVE Todd and Andrea talk new handle prototypes in the studio. TOP RIGHT Pieces from the Home collection seen here include a Sun tray, Knurl pulls and Hex candlehold­ers. BOTTOM RIGHT A pair of Crease shelves display Knurl bud vases (top shelf, far right) and a shiny Halo vase (bottom shelf). On the right-hand desk is an Angle bookend and Crease card holder. OPPOSITE In this seating area presided over by Powersurge’s Arc mirror are vintage chairs from Babelogue and a Hestia table by homestyle Editions.
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 ??  ?? ABOVE Artisan makers (from left) Paul Russell, Scott Chapman and Ross Ingram in the workshop. TOP RIGHT Here, a brushed brass Knurl Divide handle is styled with a timber Pedestal bowl by Walk in the Park. BOTTOM RIGHT A Doric peg (from the Home collection) in the making.
ABOVE Artisan makers (from left) Paul Russell, Scott Chapman and Ross Ingram in the workshop. TOP RIGHT Here, a brushed brass Knurl Divide handle is styled with a timber Pedestal bowl by Walk in the Park. BOTTOM RIGHT A Doric peg (from the Home collection) in the making.
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 ??  ?? CLASS BRASS A ‘clean’ contrast to the workshop downstairs, for the new studio the team opted for a neutral colour palette, and made many of the desks, cabinets and shelves themselves, including these ones. This sun-lit corner also features a Loop mirror and an Isosceles bookstand.
CLASS BRASS A ‘clean’ contrast to the workshop downstairs, for the new studio the team opted for a neutral colour palette, and made many of the desks, cabinets and shelves themselves, including these ones. This sun-lit corner also features a Loop mirror and an Isosceles bookstand.

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