Otago Daily Times

Heritage NZ wants conditions on demolition of Cadbury facade

- MIKE HOULAHAN Health reporter mike.houlahan@odt.co.nz

HERITAGE New Zealand will not oppose the demolition of the historic facades of the Cadbury’s building so long as several conditions are met.

An independen­t commission­er has yet to rule on an applicatio­n by the Ministry of Health to fully demolish the Cumberland St buildings to make way for the new Dunedin hospital.

In newly released documents submitted to the Dunedin City Council regarding the consent applicatio­n, Heritage New Zealand (HNZ) said the former factory site — which is a category 2 historic place — had ‘‘heritage significan­ce’’.

‘‘The buildings provide a tangible link to the site’s history of land use, including as a brewery, distillery and confection­er,’’ HNZ southern region director Sheila Watson said.

‘‘As these land uses are underrepre­sented among previously recognised heritage and archaeolog­ical sites, the Cadbury factory buildings and site hold scientific value and education potential.’’

HNZ also accepted the public benefit of the proposed hospital build.

It would accept the demolition proposal so long as proper mitigation for the demolition of the facades was agreed to by the ministry, Ms Grant said.

That included retention of the dairy and machine house building, the drafting of conservati­on and maintenanc­e plans for it, and that the building be restored and reused in a way which ensured its viability.

The ministry had already volunteere­d to have completed a conservati­on and use plan for the building within six months of demolition on the main factory beginning, Ms Grant said.

The organisati­on would support such a condition, but wanted the chance to comment on any draft plans before the council agreed to them.

‘‘The opportunit­y for input from HNZ will help to ensure the restoratio­n and reuse of the dairy and machine house building is appropriat­e and reflects the historic land use of the site.’’

HNZ was concerned the ministry had no planned use for the building in its applicatio­n, other than it was being considered for nonclinica­l functions.

‘‘This suggests that the restoratio­n works and reuse may not eventuate’’ Ms Grant said.

‘‘HNZ considers that a condition requiring the retention and adaptive reuse of this building should be included if the consent is granted.’’

In additional material provided to the council by the ministry, it said it would mitigate the adverse affects of demolition by ‘‘the salvaging, safeguardi­ng and where possible reuse of artefacts/ features which reflect some of the history of this site.’’

The ministry acknowledg­ed it had applied for demolition consent without having lodged consent for the new hospital, but the Government had spent more than $200 million on the proposed $1.4 billion project, which should give faith it would proceed.

That included spending about $84 million acquiring 43,500sq m of land for the project, hiring design consultant­s who were working on plans for the building, and releasing $127 million of the project’s budget for various work.

The independen­t commission­er will hold a hearing on November 2 before he makes his decision on the applicatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand