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From the Libraries postcard collection
Government Buildings, Wellington, H. Plimmer, photographer, circa 1910.
Wellington's Architecture
& Building Heritage

Intro | Victorian & Edwardian | Art Deco & Interwar | Postwar & Modernism
The architecture of our city is a reflection of our history over the past 150 years. From simple wooden houses, to streamlined Art Deco housing blocks, to the curves and vibrant colours of post-modern architecture - in Wellington you can find examples of almost every major architectural style of the last 150 years.

Our city is also in a state of continual transition and transformation with different architectural styles coming into and falling out of fashion. Sometimes buildings which were at the cutting edge of design when they were constructed, look tired and dated only two or three decades later. Yet occasionally the same buildings become celebrated as a new generation begins to recognise them for their innovative architecture and heritage values.

Intersection of Lambton Quay, Hunter Street, and Featherston Street, Wellington, with the Mutual Life & Citizens Assurance Company Building. Reference number: 1/1-018110; G. Reproduced with the kind permission of the Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. Permission must be obtained before any re-use of this image Sometimes this recognition comes too late and it has resulted in our city losing many architectural treasures in the name of "progress". A cry of protest may arise as a developer's plans are revealed, but many buildings have been demolished without being publicly mourned. Some exist only as tantalising images in period photographs - leaving the viewer to wonder how different our city might have looked had they survived.

Some of our buildings may at first glance seem ordinary but on digging a little deeper, layers of social history gradually reveal themselves. Some can only be fully appreciated if they are viewed in context of the era in which they were built - what may seem normal to the point of banality today could have been a revolutionary shift in building design at the time.

At its best, architecture can be seen as public art - always on display for us to enjoy. Like other forms of art, changes in architectural styles can mirror how we have developed as a nation. Early Wellington architecture simply replicated what was happening in Britain and America. Slowly European and 'International' styles were added to the mix and gradually these different forms were adapted to our physical and social environment until a true 'vernacular' style of New Zealand architecture emerged.

Wellington City Libraries has a large and popular collection of material about Wellington's built heritage and architecture. Most of these are located at the Central Library, but branch libraries will have smaller collections of similar material.

Some of the books we have are quite rare or are in heavy demand, so they are only available as reference items on the 2nd floor of the Central library. Please ask at the enquiries desk if you need help in locating any of these resources.

Intersection of Lambton Quay, Hunter Street, and Featherston Street, Wellington, with the Mutual Life & Citizens Assurance Company Building. Reference number: 1/1-018110; G. Reproduced with the kind permission of the Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand.GENERAL ARCHITECTURAL HISTORY

Wellington heritage building inventory 2001 / prepared for Wellington City Council by Boffa Miskell Limited with Chris Cochran
Ref 720.993141 WEL
Available only as a reference item, this two-volume set covers the history of over 300 of Wellington's non-residential heritage buildings. Volume 1 covers non-residential buildings scattered throughout Wellington while Volume 2 covers the history and buildings of five different heritage 'precincts' - Allen and Blair Streets, Clyde Quay, Courtenay Place, Cuba Street, and Shelly Bay. It is essential reading and should be the 'first stop' for anyone interested in our architectural heritage.

A history of New Zealand architecture / Peter Shaw ; photographs by Robin Morrison & Paul McCredie.
720.9931 SHA
Though this work is not specifically about Wellington, many of Wellington's great buildings are included. This book (now into its 3rd edition) is an excellent guide to how our architecture has developed and is a useful in assisting you to recognise the different styles and periods which surround us.

New Zealand architecture / by Martin Hill
720.9931 HIL
Published for High School students by the Department of Education in 1976, this book offers an excellent introduction to the development of New Zealand architecture. Though it was not specifically about Wellington, as the Schools Publication Branch of the Department of Education was based here, the Capital City seems to feature on almost every page! The emergence of a distinctive NZ style of architecture (termed "the new look") around the time this book was published means that this particular period is well examined.

Victorian and Edwardian Era


Lambton Quay looking South, ca 1920 - 1925. From the Wellington City Libraries Postcard CollectionMost of us think of this period when we hear the term "heritage building". As there was little quality building stone available in Wellington, almost all early-mid Victorian structures were built of wood. As such, relatively few of these buildings have survived in Wellington - unlike in Canterbury and Otago where stone was widely used. The bulk of our surviving buildings from this period were built after 1890 when concrete emerged as a 'new' permanent building material which could emulate the structural and aesthetic qualities of stone. The arrival of concrete also coincided with the end of the 1880's depression and a period of economic and population growth which was to continue through the Edwardian period until World War I.

Intersection of Lambton Quay, Hunter Street, and Featherston Street, Wellington, with the Mutual Life & Citizens Assurance Company Building. Reference number: 1/1-018110; G. Reproduced with the kind permission of the Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand.VICTORIAN & EDWARDIAN ERA BOOKS

Wellington through a Victorian lens / by William Main.
779 MAI
This is a wonderfully evocative book with many stunning photographs. It gives a very good impression of how inner-city Wellington looked until the turn of last century.

Old St Paul's / edited by Margaret Alington.
Old St. Paul's : an illustrated essay / Deric N. Bircham.
Old St. Paul's : the first 100 years / by Dallas Moore.
Restoring Old St Paul's / by Peter Sheppard.
Frederick Thatcher and St. Paul's / by Margaret Alington.
All 726.65
Old St Paul's has become one of Wellington's most loved and studied buildings. The centre of Anglican worship in Wellington for 98 years, the church has now been deconsecrated, but is still in regular use for weddings, funerals, and concerts. Though it may seem extraordinary today, the wooden building came very close to being demolished in the early 1960s to make way for an office block. The building was finally offered to the Government in 1966 and restored. It is now recognised as a landmark in the history of heritage conservation in New Zealand.

Styles of Sham and Genuine Simplicity : Timber Buildings in Wellington to the 1880s, by Chris Cochran, in The Making of Wellington, 1800-1914 / edited by David Hamer and Roberta Nicholls
992.141 MAK
Contained within a book of collected essays on the history of early Wellington, this academic 'paper' describes in fascinating detail the period when timber was the primary material used for inner-city buildings until its replacement by masonry in the late 19th century.

Four cottages : Newsletter / New Zealand Historic Places Trust. v. 2 no. 3
728.37 FOU
Describes and gives the history of four of the oldest surviving houses in Wellington - the Nairn Street cottage, the Spinks cottage, the Waiora cottage, and the Pilot's cottage.

Wellington's old buildings : a photographic guide to old buildings in central Wellington / David Kernohan with the assistance of Marilyn McHaffie and Jim Gard'ner ; photographs by Tony Kellaway ; sketches by John Gray.
720.993141 KER
Written by a former lecturer in architecture at Victoria University, this 'pocket' guide is a great introduction to many of the older buildings in the central city. It would be an ideal tool to assist you in a self-guided walking tour. Many of the buildings in the guide have been restored since it was published in 1994 - a reflection of our changing attitude to heritage buildings.

Early Wellington churches / Charles Fearnley ; edited by Julie Bremner.
726 FEA
Charles Fearnley (1915 - 198?) was a Wellington based architect, photographer, and writer. He was also a pioneer in recognising the importance of Wellington's architectural heritage long before it was fashionable to do so. This book is a fascinating and well researched study into some of Wellington's most loved churches including Old St Paul's, St John's and St Peter's on Willis Street and the Crematorium Chapel at Kaori Cemetery.

Vintage Wellington; photographs of the earlier buildings of Wellington, by Charles Fearnley
720.993141 FEA
Published in 1970, this book is based around a collection of photographs taken by the author over a decade. Unlike many other photographers, Fearnley made the effort to go beyond the usual familiar 'picture postcard' scenes and to photograph the old working-class and industrial areas of Wellington. It is a remarkable document which shows just how much of old Wellington survived until relatively recent times - but also how much we have lost since then.

The New Zealand Government Buildings past and future / written by Michael Kelly ; photography by Tony Kellaway
725.11 KEL
Michael Kelly is one of New Zealand's best known architectural historians and in this book he details some of the transformations which this important heritage building has undergone over the decades. Once run-down and disused after years of Government Department use, this piece of NZ architectural heritage (one of the largest wooden buildings in the world) was restored back to its former glory in a massive project managed by the Department of Conservation in the mid-1990s.

Cityscapes / David McGill, Grant Tilly
720.993141 MACG
A series of 22 'vignettes' of elderly buildings which were originally published in the Evening Post in the mid 1970s. Rather than offering a simple architectural analysis, David McGill gives a potted social history of the buildings. If buildings could talk - these are the sort of stories they would tell. Accompanying the text is a series of beautifully executed 'pen and ink' drawings by the renowned actor, Grant Tilly. Sadly many of these buildings have now been demolished.

Art Deco and Interwar period


Prudential Assurance building, Lambton Quay, Wellington. Reference number: 1/1-015619; F. Reproduced with the kind permission of the Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. Permission must be obtained before any re-use of this imageWorld War I was to dramatically alter the social, political, and cultural order of the world. In turn this influenced what was happening in the fields of art and design and was to have an important effect on the development of new architectural styles in New Zealand. Following the 1930s depression the Government began to emerge as a major instigator of new large-scale building projects. Innovative Art Deco design concepts started to arrive from the United States (the most famous local example being the buildings designed for the 1939-40 Centennial Exhibition held at Rongotai) though these were primarily concerned with appearance and aesthetics rather than structure or engineering.
Intersection of Lambton Quay, Hunter Street, and Featherston Street, Wellington, with the Mutual Life & Citizens Assurance Company Building. Reference number: 1/1-018110; G. Reproduced with the kind permission of the Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand.ART DECO & INTERWAR PERIOD BOOKS

Heritage trail : art deco : Wellington's 1930s buildings / [author: Michael Kelly].
919.3141 KEL
Though primarily written to assist you in a self-guided tour of Wellington Art Deco heritage, it offers a good general history to the rise of this distinctive architectural style in the capital. An updated edition was published in 2004.

Zeal and crusade : the modern movement in Wellington / edited by John Wilson.
720.9931 ZEA
This series of collected essays is one of the best introductions to the rise of modernism and the 'International Style' in Wellington. Though it covers both the pre and post-war periods, the 1930s through to the end of WWII is particularly well covered with chapters on the Centennial Exhibition buildings, the State Fire Insurance building (now the Wellington headquarters Te Puni Kokiri), and two of the Department of Housing's largest and most important projects - the Berhampore and Dixon Street Flats.

Wellington Railway Station, New Zealand / New Zealand Railways.
385.31 Published in 1938 to commemorate the completion of one of the largest buildings constructed in New Zealand during the 1930s, this guide shows just how little of this landmark structure has changed over the years.

New Zealand Displayed : Anscombe's Exhibition Design, by William Toomath & Maori Buildings for the Centennial, by Bernard Kernot, in Creating a national spirit : celebrating New Zealand's centennial / edited by William Renwick.
993.1 CRE Two 'papers' from a fascinating collection of essays looking at the history of the 1939-1940 Centennial Exhibition. The first essay examines the stunning architectural forms created by one of New Zealand's greatest Art Deco architects, Edmund Anscombe. The second examines the development of the buildings and carvings that made up the "Maori Court" at the exhibition and how they were viewed by Pakeha and Maori.

Postwar period, Modernism and the rise of the Vernacular


Photographic montage of proposed design by Ernst Plischke of Massey House, Lambton Quay, c.1951. Private collection.  Not to be reproduced.As we develop as a nation, we have started to recognise our heritage buildings 'young'. Some may be confused when the term "heritage building" is applied to what many might perceive to be a relatively new structure. However by recognising of some of our new landmark buildings earlier, we can be better assured that future generations will be able to enjoy them as we do today.
Intersection of Lambton Quay, Hunter Street, and Featherston Street, Wellington, with the Mutual Life & Citizens Assurance Company Building. Reference number: 1/1-018110; G. Reproduced with the kind permission of the Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand.POSTWAR and MODERN ARCHITECTURE BOOKS

Voices of silence : New Zealand's Chapel of Futuna / Russell Walden.
726.4 WAL
This book celebrates one of the great landmark buildings in New Zealand's architectural history - the chapel designed by John Scott located in the former Catholic retreat of Futuna in Karori. Largely unrecognised for many years, it is now seen as an important step in the emergence of New Zealand's bi-cultural identity in architecture - where the Gothic tradition of Catholic design blended with European Modernism and Maori forms and concepts.

Looking for the local : architecture and the New Zealand modern / Justine Clark and Paul Walker.
720.931 CLA
Published by Victoria University Press, this book is based around a box of old photographs discovered in the Alexander Turnbull Library. Taken in the 1950s, these photographs had originally been collected for a book on "new" New Zealand architecture which never eventuated. The accompanying text gives a fascinating commentary on the different tensions which existed within the architectural fraternity at the time - divisions which eventually led to the original book being "shelved". Though not Wellington specific, many of the Capital's early-modern commercial building and houses are featured.

Design and living / Ernst Plischke.
729 PLI
Vom Menschlichen im neuen Bauen. On the human aspect of modern architecture / Ernst Plischke.
724.91 PLI
Ernst Plischke : das Neue Bauen und die Neue Welt : das Gesamtwerk / Eva B. Ottilinger, August Sarnitz.
724.91 PLI
The architecture of E.A. Plischke in New Zealand, 1939-1962 : a thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Art History in the University of Canterbury / by Linda Tyler.
720.92 PLI
Ernst Plischke was instrumental in introducing the Modern Movement to New Zealand architecture. He was already a highly regarded architect in his native Austria when he fled to Wellington in 1939 fearing Nazi persecution after the annexation of Austria by the German Reich. After working for the Housing Department for eight years, he branched out into private practice, designing some of the first Modernist homes in Wellington and New Zealand's first modern office building - Massey House on Lambton Quay. He returned to Austria in 1963 where he became head of one of the world's most prestigious architectural institutions, the Master Architecture School at the Academy of Fine Arts of Austria - but left a lasting impression on New Zealand's architecture and urban landscape.

Wellington's new buildings : a photographic guide to new buildings in central Wellington / David Kernohan ; with the assistance of Marilyn McHaffie and Keith Small ; photographs by Gavin Woodward ; sketches by John Gray.
720.993141 KER
A companion volume to David Kernohan's Wellington's Old Buildings, this critical guide looks at some of the buildings constructed in Wellington during the 1960s, 70s, and 80s.

Positively architecture : New Zealand's Roger Walker / by Gerald Melling.
720.92
Roger Walker has been responsible for some of Wellington's most distinctive residential buildings. With their zany peaks, turrets, and round windows, his buildings were a deliberate move away from the clean formal lines of the "International Style" promoted by earlier Modernists such as Plischke.

Joyful architecture : the genius of New Zealand's Ian Athfield / written and compiled by Gerald Melling ; photography by Tony Athfield.
728 MEL
Athfield Architects, and Aasen Athfield + Co, 1968-1993. A special issue of World architecture review, v. 93, 4.
720.9931 ATH
Ian Athfield (and his firm, Athfield Architects), is today one of the most recognised names in contemporary New Zealand Architecture. Joyful Architecture looks at Athfield's early work up to 1980 when like his contemporary Roger Walker, he pushed NZ architecture in new directions. The World Architectural Review special issue shows how the 'rebel' of the 1970s has become one of the most respected names in NZ architecture. This book also includes some early work, but concentrates on the innovative designs that Athfield created during the 1980s and early 1990s (including the Central Branch of Wellington City Libraries!).

The mid-city crisis and other stories / Gerald Melling.
Ref 720.993141 MEL
When an author states on the first page of his book "...it's a weird and dislocating experience to absorb one's self in the writings and projects of Italian master architect / builder Aldo Rossi...and then embark on an investigative stroll through the bombsite facsimile that passes for downtown Wellington" you know you are dealing with someone with strong opinions! This collection of essays from Wellington based architect Gerald Melling was published in 1989 at the tail end of a decade long construction-boom which had seen Wellington change dramatically (and not always for the better).

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