Stratford Press

Time to upgrade museum

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Objects that are stored in uninsulate­d rooms with dirt floors in South Taranaki’s Patea museum will benefit from an upgrade to the property.

Aotea Utanganui — the South Taranaki District Museum has been granted $618,756 by the Lottery environmen­t and heritage committee. It will be put toward building a new exhibition space and more collection storage.

The work will be the second stage in a planned three-stage redevelopm­ent.

Collection and storage space has reached capacity, the committee said.

Many objects are stored in the old part of the museum, which is not structural­ly sound, has no insulation and has a dirt floor in parts.

The museum’s collection includes farm and industrial remnants and the Waitore taonga, wooden objects that date back to the 1600s and were excavated from a swampy stream near Patea. The carvings and tools show clear Polynesian patterning and have significan­ce to Taranaki iwi.

The proposed new building will be at 100 per cent of new building standard and have a fire protection system.

“The committee saw the project as a good fit with its purpose to conserve, protect and/or promote collection­s and stories that are important to New Zealand’s cultural heritage and identity,” its statement said. The museum opened in April 2011. It is a partnershi­p between South Taranaki District Council and the South Taranaki District Museum Trust. To open it, the trust raised $1 million for its buildings and $350,000 for its exhibition­s.

When it opened, trust secretary Marie McKay said there were years of work on its collection to come.

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 ?? Photo / Richard Wotton ?? Aotea Utanganui — the South Taranaki museum — will benefit from a grant from the Lottery environmen­t and heritage committee.
Photo / Richard Wotton Aotea Utanganui — the South Taranaki museum — will benefit from a grant from the Lottery environmen­t and heritage committee.

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