Whanganui Chronicle

Raise your gaze

John Walsh’s pick of Auckland's best-designed buildings

- Auckland Architectu­re: A Walking Guide by John Walsh, photograph­y by Patrick Reynolds, published by Massey University Press, RRP $25

There’s no denying it — Auckland, especially the downtown area, gets some bad press. Much of it, unsurprisi­ngly, is road-related. However, above the streets, the city has another dimension. Like all cities, Auckland is a vertical creation. If you raise your gaze, you can see the results of a century-and-a-half of design ambition. Up higher it expresses itself in a more sophistica­ted language — in the columns, parapets and pediments of older buildings and the sleeker facades of more recent structures.

Auckland has a lot to offer the architectu­rally curious. The latest edition of Auckland Architectu­re: A Walking Guide presents 65 buildings in an inner-city catchment defined by the ridgeline running along Ponsonby and Karangahap­e Roads and into the Domain. Here are half a dozen worth a closer look.

West Plaza, on the corner of Customs St West and Albert St, was completed in 1974, to the design of the firm of Price Adams Dodd. The slim, elliptical building is almost impossibly graceful, especially for a commercial building. It’s unlikely a contempora­ry developer would opt for such a refined shape over an easily partitione­d rectangula­r box.

The Hotel Britomart on Galway St is the latest addition to the Britomart precinct. The building, designed by Cheshire Architects, combines clarity of form with textural richness. With its sheer, flat facades clad in bespoke bricks, the Hotel Britomart pulls off the difficult trick of simultaneo­usly standing out from, and fitting in with, the restored heritage buildings on its block.

Those buildings, which look better than ever, are testament to the late Victorian appetite for architectu­ral adornment. The three are best viewed as a group from the south side of Customs Street East, where they read as a strip of ornate urban wallpaper hung between Commerce St and Gore St. The buildings — from west to east, the Excelsior Building (Edmund Bell, 1897), Stanbeth House (Edmund Bell, 1885) and the Buckland Building (Edward Mahoney & Sons, 1885) — were constructe­d as warehouses on either side of the depression of the late 1880s.

In the 1930s, the Excelsior lost half its width when Commerce St was widened. The blank wall on its Commerce St side lately has been put to good use as the canvas for a full-height permanent artwork Maunga by Shane Cotton.

Another surprise in the Britomart precinct is the rehabilita­tion of Australis House (Mitchell & Watt, 1904) and A.H. Nathan Warehouse (Arthur Pollard Wilson, 1904). The backsides of these neighbouri­ng buildings, which front on to Customs St East, were hidden before the making of Takutai Square. In 2017, architectu­re practice Peddlethor­p took advantage of the buildings’ new visibility by applying a plaster tracery of Australis’ fancy Customs St facade to the formerly plain north face of the building. Auckland Architectu­re: A Walking Guide isn’t just about the CBD. If you’d like to head east, a natural destinatio­n is the city’s most significan­t building, Auckland War Memorial Museum Ta¯ maki Paenga Hira. In 2020, just over 90 years since the completion of the original neo-Classical building (Grierson, Aimer & Draffin, 1929), and 15 years after architect Noel Lane suspended a big kava bowl in the museum’s 1960 extension (M.K. and R.F. Draffin), the institutio­n opened the re-worked South Atrium, Te Ao Ma¯rama. Designed by Jasmax, FJMT, Design Tribe and Salmond Reed Architects, and featuring artwork by Brett Graham, Filipe Tohi and Chris Bailey, Te Ao Ma¯ rama is a determined effort to include in the museum, and in the Auckland story, the living cultures of the city’s Ma¯ori and Pasifika population­s.

Finally, an excursion to Ponsonby. Vermont St has long had religious associatio­ns — these days it is home to a Catholic seminary and a mosque — so it’s appropriat­e that its most impressive building is a church: Sacred Heart, designed by Thorpe, Cutter, Pickmere, Douglas and Partners.

The parish priest wanted an “ultra-modern building”, and that, in 1966, is what he got, along with a roof as steep as the spire on a Gothic cathedral.

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 ?? The Excelsior Building on Commerce St. Photos / Patrick Reynolds; Russ Flatt ?? The re-worked South Atrium, Te Ao Marama at Auckland Museum; right:
The Excelsior Building on Commerce St. Photos / Patrick Reynolds; Russ Flatt The re-worked South Atrium, Te Ao Marama at Auckland Museum; right:

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