Otago Daily Times

Design revealed for new Luggate hall

WANAKA

- KERRIE WATERWORTH kerrie.waterworth@odt.co.nz

POSSIBLY New Zealand’s first ever passive house designed community hall has moved closer to reality, and Luggate residents are among the first to see the ‘‘developed design’’ for the Luggate Memorial Hall’s replacemen­t.

Luggate Community Associatio­n chairman Graeme Perkins said the hall’s passive house standard design and panelised timber would set it apart from other community buildings.

‘‘We are a growing but very tightknit community and having such an environmen­tally sensitive building as the permanent replacemen­t for the old hall will mean a lot for current and future residents,’’ he said.

Developed in Germany and applying to all kinds of buildings, not just houses, the passive house standard results in buildings that use about 90% less heating energy than existing buildings and 75% less than an average new one.

The stakeholde­rs’ group included community associatio­n members, Queenstown Lakes district councillor­s Calum MacLeod, Niamh Shaw and Quentin Smith, members of the project team, and council staff.

Council property director Richard

Pope said the new hall would not have been possible without community trust grants; the Central Lakes Trust approved a grant of $750,000 while the Otago Community Trust granted an additional $400,000 recently.

The former Luggate Community Hall was decommissi­oned in 2017 due to seismic concerns, and the Queenstown Lakes District Council provided a temporary replacemen­t in July last year.

 ?? IMAGE: SALMOND
ARCHITECTU­RE ?? The proposed Luggate Memorial Centre.
IMAGE: SALMOND ARCHITECTU­RE The proposed Luggate Memorial Centre.

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