Weekend Herald

Luxurious unit will fire you up

Contempora­ry apartment is the last available in this Heritage- listed building, writes Donna McIntyre

- APARTMENT LIVING

Dealing with heritage buildings is demanding and rewarding, says Nigel McKenna, who has overseen the developmen­t of six luxury Mt Eden apartments in the Chambers & Station apartment project at 64 Valley Rd.

“You have to understand someone else’s vision and then translate that to meet contempora­ry requiremen­ts,” says Nigel, the developmen­t director of Developmen­t Advisory Services.

He says the Chambers & Station apartments take their names from the buildings’ origins as the suburb’s council chambers and fire station. The buildings, now listed as Heritage New Zealand category B, were built in the early 1900s; the chambers in 1912 and the fire station in 1924.

“Although a mere 12 years separated their constructi­on, they are centuries apart in building technology,” says Nigel.

“The council chambers building used technology that had existed for the previous 200 years — double brick and plaster, timber windows and timber floors.

“The fire station, built after World War I, was one of the earliest buildings made of reinforced insitu concrete with steel window frames.”

In 1970, the two buildings were temporaril­y conjoined with a lightweigh­t structure that Nigel’s company removed to create the new entry and lobby.

2

1/ 64 VALLEY RD, MT EDEN SIZE: PRICE GUIDE: AUCTION: BODY CORP: INSPECT:

2

CONTACT: ON THE WEB:

The overall project took three years from inception, with about a year’s worth of designing, consenting and planning, and the other two years carrying out work on site.

“We did a full refurbishm­ent internally and externally of both buildings, including acoustic, thermal and fire upgrade, created a new glass foyer/ entry with new lift and stairs, a semi- undergroun­d car park with a green roof and full roof replacemen­t,” says Nigel.

The buildings converted well to residentia­l, he says. The Station apartments feature darker tones than the Chambers apartments, which are lighter with a lot of white.

Lead architects were Jennifer Hanson and Kendon McGrail of A Studio, with a significan­t input from Nigel and assistance from Stewart Harris of design company Macintosh Harris.

The developmen­t has six freehold luxury apartments, ranging in size from 86 to 210sq m.

Unit 1, which measures 113sq m, is the last apartment to be sold. It is in what was the fire station part of the developmen­t, has two bedrooms and is a through unit with east and west orientatio­n. The main kitchen/ dining/ living area is open plan, with a multiple- use space to the east end and a conservato­ry living area to the west. Bifolds open to a west- orientated courtyard with a covered louvred area and outdoor gas fireplace, adjacent to a communal lawn.

The two bedrooms each have a bathroom and there is a separate laundry. There is also secure basement parking.

The unit looks out to Mt Eden’s heritage villas and greenery.

With these apartments completed, Nigel — whose other Auckland developmen­ts include the DFS Galleria in the Old Custom House, the old District Court building conversion in the Metropolis, Beaumont Quarter, the Sebel/ Quays, Lighter Quay and the Quadrant Hotel — says his next project is in Kingsland.

“Developmen­t Advisory Services has just commenced constructi­on of NXN, our 78- unit apartment project facing on to Nixon Park.”

 ??  ?? PHOTOS / SUPPLIED
PHOTOS / SUPPLIED
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand