A ruling over the revitalisation project for Canterbury Museum
has left the museum in limbo but hopeful for the future.
A
sketch showing one of the design proposals.
image: courtesy Athfield Architects
It's back to the drawing board for CanterburyMuseum, sorely in need
of updating to accommodate changing times and its collection. Architect Ian Athfield's
plans for the institution have been rejected in a May Environment Court decision.
The
ruling overturned resource consents for Canterbury Museum Trust Board's vision
of a museum for the 21st century, including a large atrium and a "street"
linking the museum with the neighbouring art gallery.
The decision has
been met with approval from some Christchurch heritage campaigners - saying it
ensures additions to historic buildings won't end up an eyesore on the landscape.
Canterbury
Museum. Photo: Canterbury
Museum
The opposing sides agree on one
thing - changes needed to be made to the ageing buildings. The 1980s and early '90s
saw significant upheaval as earthquake strengthening affected the buildings. The
museum can't show much of its ollection and favourites such as the old Christchurch
street, the giant whale skeleton and the whare whakairo, Hau Te Ananui O Tangaroa,
are in storage. Sub-standard staff offices are scattered far and wide throughout
the building.
Workable fire exits are a priority, and the cramped spaces of
neo-gothic architect Benjamin Mountfort's buildings have created an entrance
that can't handle the demands of 21st century tourism. In short, the buildings'
interior and exhibition spaces needed to be brought up to date.
"I
don't see the court decision as saying you can't touch the Canterbury Museum,"
says Ian Lochhead, a Canterbury architectural historian and opponent of the
proposed changes. "Rather than saying this puts the museum in a straitjacket,
this puts the museum in a situation where they are presented with a really interesting
challenge in terms of how you preserve the collection and how you display it in
relation to the buildings."
But does Lochhead - or anyone - have
any alternatives to Athfield's plans or must the museum remain in limbo?
His
answer is astonishingly simple construct a new building. That building
could be modernist and stunning and house the parts of the museums collection
that dont suit the neo-gothic architecture of Mountforts 1882 designs.
If
it wants to display all its collection, it has the option of going off-site,
says Lochhead. Its something no museum wants to do, but if they
want to grow and develop there seems to be no alternative but to look at alternative
sites.
Lochhead suggests the current buildings house displays that
complement the architecture and the new building be dedicated to the museums
considerable Antarctic and exploration collection.
It could be
a museum of Antarctica and exploration. It doesnt make that much sense
putting a snow cat in a timber gallery space. What they cant display
coherently they should put in a new building.
That may not be much
of an option for an organisation without substantially more funding than Canterbury
Museum has at its disposal.
Canterbury Museum chief executive Anthony
Wright isnt a sceptical person. He is sure that the museum can be more than
a monument to Christchurchs past and instead a guide to the future.
Canterbury
Museum has a very proud history of being a quirky museum that is ready to change,
says Wright. The unique nature of Canterbury Museum would remain
throughout all of this it will always be uniquely Canterbury Museum. But it
was to be a museum of the future.
Im totally optimistic we
will find a solution. Its been going for 135 years and its faced
many challenges in the past. Im sure it will surmount this one.
How
the whale atrium may have looked. Image: courtesy Athfield
Architects
So does it actually have a chance
of becoming a museum of the future? Wellington Resource Management
Act lawyerTom Bennion doesnt hold out much hope of that, saying the museum
will simply have to go back to the drawing board. A proposal might succeed
which makes less change to the architecture, provides more evidence about why
other alternatives are not possible, emphasises that this is the only way forward
and that the nationally important heritage values lost from the buildings would
be compensated for by the nationally important exhibits which are not lost and/or
will be able to be properly housed, protected and displayed. But you would have
to say that the city plan and the museum itself have set a fairly high threshold
for making changes to the buildings.|
And the future plans for the
museum, and other category one buildings, will be given a thorough going over,
as the protection of heritage becomes a conservation priority.
I
think the heat is on with the use of the Resource Management Act, says
Christchurch Civic Trust Chair Peter Dyhrberg. All work will need to be
very skilful and have a certain amount of flair.
Canterbury
Museum from Worcestor St, c.1900. Photo: Canterbury
Museum
While specific to Christchurch,
because it was assessing the proposal under that citys district plan, which
has stricter conditions for heritage modifications than many others, the 76-page
Environment Court decision could in theory prevent major alterations to buildings
in desperate need of an upgrade. As a consequence, the future of Category I buildings,
in Christchurch at least, may be one rooted in the past. And thats frustrated
another of New Zealands pre-eminent architects, Sir Miles Warren.
Its
a tragedy for heritage because whoever has a heritage building who wants to
alter it is better to get rid of the building.You cant do anything at all,
says Warren, a strong advocate of the museum alterations.
The museum debate
created deep discord in the heritage community of Canterbury, with two court
cases, claim and counter-claim in Christchurchs The Press and lingering resentment
on both sides. When the Canterbury Museum Trust Board gained Christchurch City
Council approval for significant renovations to its historic buildings, the Canterbury
Civic Trust and heritage advocates, including Lochhead and Peter and Lesley Beaven,
led the opposition.
Ian Athfields plans for the Museum Trust Board
included developing a more user-friendly atrium, raising the roof, and a
grand entrance, connecting the original Mountfort buildings with the neighbouring
Art Gallery. The plans included several big changes alterations to the
Rolleston Avenue windows, a new entrance in the Centennial wing, using the
gallery as a restaurant and changing the main Mountfort entrance.
The
intention was to provide bigger display areas for international shows, create
a more flexible exhibition space and house collections to international standards.
It was meant to be a visionary change like the pyramid at the Louvre
but thats where things came unstuck.
The whare whakairo would have
been visible from the south and the Botanic Gardens. The court said the effect was
beneficial in an aesthetic sense but detracted from the heritage values of
the buildings.
The plans were described as tacky by many in
the Christchurch heritage community especially the Civic Trust and the
Beavens. A lively and contentious debate began with Peter Beaven describing the
plans as a theme park cum shopping mall. The Civic Trust gathered
international heritage experts, including Professor Tim Barringer from Yale University,
and took the MuseumTrust to the Environment Court. The result was an overwhelming
victory for the Civic Trust.
Looking into the Christchurch city plan, the
museum plan and the relevant sections of the Resource Management Act, Judge
J. R. Jackson declared the plans non-complying activities that would disrupt
the heritage values of the buildings. And with heritage an issue of national
importance under the Resource Management Act, the plans went too far. The
decision effectively vetoed Athfields plans and has severely disrupted
the proposed redevelopment of the museum.
And the ruling may be of far
greater consequence than the display of Canterburys history its
a warning to owners of all heritage buildings according to lawyer Tom Bennion.
It
is an unusual decision and a significant cautionary one for museums
and similar institutions considering new building projects, says Bennion.
Heritage is now a matter of national importance under the Resource Management
Act. The test is that it has to either have no more than minor effects or not
be contrary to the objectives and policies of the [city] plan.
And,
according to Warren, the ramifications are that heritage buildings will become
relics without people to work and live in them.
Its not
a win for heritage its an awful setback. If this process is adopted,
Christs College cannot operate as a school. Their buildings have been
altered but at the same time retain their heritage value. Theres very
little of that which can be done [now].
The opposition completely
disagrees. Lochhead says the ruling will ensure heritage buildings are preserved
and the stricter conditions opposed by the new Environment Court decision
just means designers will have to do a better job.
Its a very
important decision for long-term heritage. It lifts the bar for everybody in
terms of their performance. It makes it more challenging it means you
have to be smarter in the way you use heritage. Until now the approach to heritage
has seen it as an obstacle that needs to be worked around. What this is saying
is you cant work around it. You need to be innovative and intelligent and
look at how you use it most effectively.
And the disputes continue
over the leverage allowed by the court decision. Warren says it will prevent
quality modern additions to historic buildings as has been done to great effect
overseas. Think the National Portrait Gallery in London, which has been renovated
with a large atrium and internal escalator, and recent renovations of the Capitol
in Rome.
A living building in other words but Lochhead wants to see
that too. He says the plans failed because they werent good enough. But
to get stunning, and complementary, renovations like the Louvres famed pyramid
will cost some serious money and Lochhead says thats the price for
heritage.
The difference is the quality of those interventions,
says Lochhead. Internationally theyre at a different level of quality
from what was being proposed at the museum. We havent reached that level
in New Zealand. It may mean you need to spend more money to achieve your ultimate
goal but you have to plan in the longer term.
Peter Dyhrberg dismisses
the suggestion that this will leave heritage buildings as little more than
monuments to the past.
The assessments are going to be rigorous,
which is appropriate. I dont think its going to stop new uses being found.
But its going to require more careful treatment in the care and solutions.
It means they will be dealt with in a way thats appropriate to their
heritage status weve been a bit loose with that in the past.
But
is this a national issue or just a Christchurch one? Bennion says the citys
plan is inherently conservative in its nature, and the plans were further restricted
by the museums own conservation plan.
The court thought that
the proposal contradicted the museums own plan in a number of places.
The
Christchurch city plan has a very conservative approach to heritage and its
protection a non-complying activity of this radical nature was always
going to struggle on that score since it would be contrary to the objectives
and policies of the plan.
As for the rest of the country, the
decision means owners planning to alter their buildings will have to look very carefully
at the terms of their own councils district plans insofar as they touch
on heritage.
Bennion says plans vary widely across the country and there
may be a better chance to revamp a heritage building in Auckland than in Christchurch.
The
Court decision suggests that, with changes in legislation and the raising of
heritage to a matter of national importance, plans for heritage sites will
need to be well conceived, respect heritage values and be appropriate to adaptive
use to win community and regulatory approval.
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