
My weekend snooping around Ōtautahi's most famous buildings
Moving to Ōtautahi in the 2020s is a bit like starting a prestige TV show about five seasons in. The budget is massive, the production values slick and shiny, and the reviews are positive, but you still can't escape the fact that you've missed out on pivotal early character building and some truly enormous plot points. As a result, you're left hurriedly searching up things on Wikipedia at social events, nodding along sagely at mentions of vaguely familiar villains (Gerry Brownlee) and collecting morsels of lore like a magpie wherever you can.
Can you really ever understand a place if you missed the most galvanising moments in its recent history? And how do you go about backfilling that knowledge and those experiences? I've learned a lot already through telling stories of creativity and community here, be it the miniature rendering of the pre-quake city or the turtle rescuer still caring for quake refugees. But it was a recent deep dive into the Brutalist Timezone and the new stadium at Te Kaha that opened up another crucial (and screamingly obvious) portal to better understanding Christchurch: the buildings as central characters.
With that in mind, last weekend I toddled along to Open Christchurch, an architecture festival where the doors are swung open to some of the city's most significant buildings. Where the phrase 'architecture festival' may have previously left me retreating into one of those deep sleep chambers used by Matt Damon in Interstellar, I'd noticed there was a certain buzz around this festival for the past few years and it always seemed to sell out quickly. This year I managed to nab a powerful itinerary, and here is everything I learned from my snooping.
Saturday
My day began with a tour of College House in Riccarton, a place I had only ever driven past on the way to the airport and assumed, based on the aggro high white concrete walls, was some sort of boring sludge factory. But as we were welcomed in to stand by the crackling fire in the lounge of the student hall, I realised I could not have been more wrong. Deemed by architect Sir Miles Warren as his greatest creation when it opened in the 1960s, College House is still used as swanky University of Canterbury student accommodation to this day.
Architect Alec Bruce, who worked on the post-quake renovations, guided us through the courtyard to the Arthur Sims Library, which gave me a chilling bloodlust to study again (especially with texts on display such as Dan Carter's autobiography and 'Pizzas and Pastas'). Beneath rich warm wood panelling and spiral iron staircases, we gazed up at the centrepiece – an enormous web-like structure of dark beams and light fittings. 'Utterly gratuitous and utterly brilliant,' Bruce mused. 'And totally unexpected from the outside.'
Same goes for the College House chapel, which would be the first but not the last time I would hear about Gothic Revival (less spooky vibes, more high pitched roofing). Costing $3m to repair post-quake, the chapel was split into six pieces so the ground floor could be restored. 'This is not the sort of building an engineer would let you design post earthquake,' said Bruce. We ended the tour in the ornate art-filled dining hall, which used to have an original Bill Hammond plonked by the coffee machine until they realised how much it was worth.
From College House I zipped into the city for a tour of the Observatory Hotel in the Arts Centre, originally built in 1891 and home to the magical Townsend Teece telescope, one of the city's greatest objects. I'd written about the miraculous survival of the ' munched ' telescope during the quakes, but hadn't had the chance to nosey around its surrounds. The entire observatory tower collapsed in 2011 and was, as guide Shane Horgan told us, meticulously reconstructed with every piece of basalt stone numbered and put back in its original place like a jigsaw puzzle.
Inside the building, formerly the University of Canterbury's home of astronomy and physics, the original wooden staircase curled towards the heavens. It was still standing when everything collapsed around it, and was taken offsite and kept under a tarp at Christchurch Boys High. The stairs creaked in welcome as we ascended. 'That's a heritage feature,' laughed Horgan. 'Cost a lot of money, by the way.' After a peek at some of the rooms (very flash, very high ceilings) we ended the tour under the mighty telescope, still pointed skyward as it was over 130 years ago.
Back on the ground, I sprinted past punters on the river to Te Ara Pū Hā – yet another place I had no idea existed. Modelled on The High Line in New York, this is a four-block stretch of lush green planting that will one day form a forest corridor along the city's edge. Landscape architect Adrian Taylor and cultural advisor Te Marino Lenihan explained that the design was born out of a close working relationship with Ngai Tahu. 'The collaboration was powerful and should be done more often,' said Lenihan. 'This is the blueprint of true treaty partnership.'
That idea of treaty partnership was evident on the tour itself, which opened with Taylor doing his pepeha aloud for the very first time – Lenihan encouraging him to go off the cuff – and the group introducing themselves and where they were from. Along the way, Lenihan explained how the rebuild allowed for Ngāi Tahu to have a greater presence in the city. 'Before the quakes, Christchurch was known as the most English city outside of England,' he said. 'We were invisible as mana whenua, so the opportunity was there to put our fingerprints on the future.'
Those fingerprints could be found everywhere from the illuminated pounamu tiles to the angular stone seating inspired by purupuru. Wandering down four city blocks, we learned about the dozens of species of native plants on show, including edibles for foraging like pūha and horopito, as well as soon-to-be giants like kahikatea and harakeke. The tour ended with everyone cheersing with a 'mauri ora' before sampling a thimble of Taylor's own artisanal gin, infused with native botanicals from the very same walkway we had just strolled down.
As a non-drinker, I rode a light botanical buzz all the way to the Town Hall, chatting with a former architecture lecturer named Jonathan who had travelled from Napier for the festival. He showed me some of the sketches he had been doing around the city, and frequently stopped on the walk to point out how timber framing fire resistance works, or how the gold exterior of Tūranga looks like curtain being drawn open, or the provenance of the word 'keystone' as it relates to the arch on the Heritage hotel. My head was spinning, and not just from the 5ml of horopito gin.
We made it inside the Douglas Lillburn Auditorium, renowned for having some of the very best acoustics in the world. I walked onto the very same stage as the Vengaboys and clapped my hands. The sound reverberated powerfully around the entire hall, and I had to resist doing three more claps to the tune of 'Shalala Lala' in tribute to the Eurodance legends. I took a seat in the back row of the hall, exhausted, and watched a little kid in an All Blacks cap take the stage and belt a wobbly bit of the national anthem. Moved to tears, I knew it was time to go home.
Sunday
The day began with me racing through the labyrinth of fencing in the square to make it inside the Christ Church Cathedral for the 10am tour. Donning hard hats and fluro pink vests, a group of 50 of us were given a brief introduction outside by Carolyne Grant, director of the rebuild project team. 'This is the literal and figurative heart of the city,' she said. 'It took 40 years to build the first time, we hope it is not that long this time.' Widely reported as being 'mothballed' late last year due to a lack of funds, Grant rejected the use of that term.
'It's not mothballed yet: it's paused. And we will need to find a new way forward,' she said.
With a heartfelt warning that re-entering the cathedral can feel overwhelming, we quietly stepped inside. One woman instinctively put her hand over her heart as she looked around at the exposed wooden skeleton. Another muttered 'oh, it's so sad' to nobody in particular. People shared stories of the last time they had been inside, including a man who had climbed the steeple a few weeks before the quake, and a woman who had visited the flower show with her Nana just days before. A topiary elephant stood amongst the ruins for weeks, apparently.
I admired a large yellow Beyonce-style fan, positioned close to where the altar might have originally been. It constantly secretes a bubblegum-smelling vapour that keeps the pigeons away – the same who famously dropped two tonnes of poo over their decade of squatting. Grant also acknowledged the dozens of stray cats and kittens who lived in the derelict cathedral over the years, and assured us all that they had all been safely rehomed. Now, her attention is focussed on the future: 'we could lose the cathedral if we don't care for it,' she warned.
It was very difficult not to be stirred by the sheer scale, emotion and ambition of the cathedral restoration project, already $85 million deep and only one third of the way complete when it was put on ice. Should Christchurch cling on to salvaging the first cathedral ever built in this country? Or cut our losses, let the pigeons back in, and call it an overpriced aviary? I didn't know the answer and I didn't really have time to mull it over – across the square the mayor and Dame Adrienne Stewart were about to cut the ribbon on the brand new Court Theatre.
With dust from the cathedral still on my boots, I joined a heaving crowd of radio hosts, Court Jesters and Mark Hadlow, all chomping at the bit to get into the new theatre. 'There is no place like home, so welcome to our new home,' said Dame Stewart. We poured inside, marvelling at all the exposed light wood and rusted exterior, a nod to the temporary location – The Shed – where the Court has operated for over a decade. Kids were doing improv in the rehearsal space, we got to poke around the props (fake eggs! fake pizza!) and look at the costume workroom.
'People make costumes here for their job,' explained one mum to her daughter, whose jaw was on the floor at all the wigs and shiny fabrics. 'You could go to uni and study that.'
From the brand new home of theatre to a temporary home of worship, I trotted my dusty boots through Latimer Square to the Transitional 'cardboard' Cathedral. Designed by Japanese architect Shigeru Ban and opened in 2013 for just $7 million dollars, there really was quite a lot of cardboard happening everywhere. As I stared up at the 96 cardboard tubes, each weighing 500 kg, that lined the A-Frame building, guide Richard Parker told me that Ban kindly donated the design pro-bono to the city. 'He's an All Blacks supporter, which helps,' he smiled.
The very last stop on my tour was Chateau on the Park, a really buzzy hotel designed by Peter Beavan in the 1970s in time for the Commonwealth Games. Tucked away in the bush off Deans Ave – 'you can still walk to Ricky mall from here, but you really feel like you are somewhere else' said guide Ann McEwan – even my half-shut eyes could recognise the high pitched roof as Gothic Revival. There was also a fish-filled moat (?) and two enormous suspended functional cauldrons (?). 'Two of the most bizarre things you will ever find in Christchurch,' McKewan said.
As a smiling robot vacuum cleaner parted our tour group like the red sea, I felt like I was finally transcending all sense of time and space. In just 48 hours I had been inside late 1800s Gothic Revival relics, 1960s university halls, 2010s post-quake disaster architecture and a brand new 2020s theatre only a few hours old. I had also seen the future in a newly-planted greenway, the lush results of which none of us will even be around to see. I had sipped botanical gin, picked pūha, clapped on a stage, and learned a lot more about this place than a Wikipedia page could ever offer.
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The Spinoff
3 days ago
- The Spinoff
‘Fallen between the cracks': The mystery of New Zealand's lost emo anthem
Alex Casey goes in search of 'Crawl' by Atlas, the beloved mid-2000s emo anthem that's 'fallen between the cracks'. It's some time in 2007 and Britomart is swarming with gloomy loiterers, their sullen faces hidden behind swooping side fringes, black eyeliner and snakebite piercings. The black jeans are so tight that they can't possibly require that many studded belts, not to mention the stacks of leather chokers limiting the flow of oxygen to the brain. Perhaps this is why the crowd soon collapses into a state of mass unconsciousness, Nokia 3315s strewn far and wide, as two brave survivors unleash a battle cry to help them claw through the morose milieu. 'I won't fall between the cracks, yeah / Just leave some space for me to learn to crawl' 'Crawl' by Atlas was the biggest New Zealand single of 2007, clinging to number one in the charts for seven weeks and eventually becoming the sixth biggest song of the year (between 'Bartender' by T-Pain ft. Akon and 'Because of You' by Ne-Yo). Nearly two decades later, the YouTube comments beneath the music video are littered with happy memories. 'I am Korean and when I was in NZ in 2007 I could hear this song everywhere,' shares one commenter. 'This was a banger in my childhood, never even knew it was a kiwi song,' adds another. But through the nostalgic haze, there's also a sense of bubbling rage from hundreds upon hundreds of New Zealanders who can't find 'Crawl' on any music streaming platforms. 'It is a crime that this song was number 1 on C4 tv for soooo long and its not even on spotty [Spotify]' someone wrote just last year, garnering 320 likes in support. 'Sucks that spotify doesn't have this song grrr' has 520 likes, and was written eight years ago. Even the relatively fresh '2025 and still waiting for this track to drop on Spotify!' has already got 77 likes. One such aggrieved New Zealander is Justine Sachs, a self-described 'Crawl' superfan. 'It's just the perfect song,' she says. Not only does Sachs enjoy the 'crazy belter' chorus and the harmonies from Beth Campbell – 'Evanescence couldn't. Hayley from Paramore couldn't' – she also resonated with the social message as a moody teen. 'It's all about people falling between the cracks, being kept down by the man. It's like the system is coming down on all of us, and all we need is space to learn to crawl,' she pauses. 'Not even walk, man, just crawl.' The timing was pertinent too. 'This was the height of My Chemical Romance after The Black Parade and Fall Out Boy, but we also had this wave of local bands like Goodnight Nurse, Elemeno P, Goodshirt and Atlas. It felt really special to have our own local version of it.' Watching the music video every afternoon on C4 also helped canonise 'Crawl'. 'Britomart was such an important spot for me and my friends. When you're 13, there are not a lot of places you can go to be contemplative and flick your emo fringe around, so we felt really seen.' But seasons change, fringes grow out, and eventually the world moved on. The futuristic fountain of Britomart, home to 'Crawl' and also 'We Gon' Ride' was removed to extend the station, and Sachs similarly turned her back on her roots. 'I tried to suppress my emo background and pretend it all never happened,' she says. That was until about a decade later, at Shadows Bar in the University of Auckland, when a few words from 'Crawl' crept back into her mind. Nobody else remembered it, insisting she was thinking of 'Crawling' by Linkin Park. Sachs took to Spotify but couldn't find any evidence of the song, and spent some time wondering if she had made it up. 'For a while I couldn't even remember it enough to find any evidence of it, but I also knew deep down that a part of me was missing,' she says. After getting into another heated discussion about 'Crawl' at a party, she went home and finally found the music video on YouTube. 'It was a real renaissance moment for me – I even made a playlist of New Zealand pop punk and emo, but I was so sad because I couldn't add 'Crawl'.' Now, 'a few times a year', Sachs is forced to load up YouTube to play 'Crawl' at parties and other assorted social situations, complete with pre-roll ads. 'It's not ideal at all, and it's actually a disservice to a very important song,' she says. 'I'm really trying my best to support artists – I don't even have Spotify and use Apple Music now – but I don't want to get YouTube Premium just for this one song.' Asked if she has a message for Atlas, Sachs is clear: 'I want to know why their song isn't on streaming services, and I also just want to know if they are OK.' Ben Campbell, founding member of Atlas, is OK. He's busy, in fact, running a restaurant in Akaroa, and doesn't have quite as much time as I do to dwell in the minutiae of 2007. But after a few days of phone tag, he is more than happy to return to the origins of Atlas. The band formed in the mid-2000s after Campbell had left Zed, and was working in Las Vegas with his sister Beth on a Robert Lamm live DVD. Sean Cunningham, the gravelly-voiced Kentucky boy who would soon be crawling dramatically through Britomart, was hired to be their driver. 'We got along really well, and one night Sean came back to the hotel room, we got the guitars out, and we had this amazing two-hour session where we wrote three songs,' says Campbell. They decided then and there to start a band together – working name Tall Poppies – and brought Sean back to Christchurch to keep making demos. While they stayed independent by setting up their own label structure, the band eventually signed with Warner Music to help with the production and distribution of their first (and only) album, Reasons For Voyaging. As for 'Crawl', Campbell remembers writing it in a flurry in their flat in Addington. They didn't know initially that it would be their big hit, but Campbell recalls a moment where the whole band were standing in an elevator together and they realised the melody of the song was going through all of their heads simultaneously. 'That's when I thought, OK, there's something really catchy here,' he says. The song was released in March 2007, entering the charts at number nine and shooting straight to number one, where it would stay for nearly two months. 'That first week that it charted at number one, we just absolutely lost it,' says Campbell. 'Each week we'd sit there at that same spot at Andy's flat [Andy Lynch, guitarist for Zed and Atlas] and refresh it. We just could not believe that it would keep coming back at number one. It almost became a joke, it was just amazing.' Next came the music video, which was shot in a single day outside Britomart train station. 'It felt like such a big budget production for us, because all of a sudden, here we were in Auckland's CBD with full film crews, run sheets, actors,' says Campbell. 'It was a huge level up for us, although I still remember there is that scene with a couple of Japanese school girls with wigs on. At the time I remember thinking, oh those wigs look pretty cheesy, but they must look alright on film. And now every time I watch it, I still go, nope, those wigs just look cheesy.' Cheesy wigs aside, Campbell says 'Crawl' was still a highlight of his career. 'Zed actually never had a number one single, so for me and Andy, that was a huge thing to tick off – it just happened to be on a different project,' he laughs. Although their next single 'Magic 8' peaked at number 27 in the charts, Atlas rode the momentum of 'Crawl' into tours with Silverchair and Stereophonics, before getting stuck into their second album. 'The new material was really exciting and strong, we had really matured as a band and we were really ready,' says Campbell. But when Cunningham returned to the studio to put his signature gravelly vocals down on their new demos, the band knew that something was off. 'He had this kind of ball bearing rattling in his voice,' says Campbell. 'The man's always had a bit of a growl, but something was really wrong with his voice – it sounded broken.' They tried resting and repeating over a series of days and weeks, eventually sending him to a top vocal clinic in Nashville for a month. 'Nobody could get to the bottom of it,' says Campbell. 'His voice just didn't bounce back.' With Cunningham's voice being such a big part of the band's identity, they all agreed that there was no point trying to take Atlas any further without him. 'It was really sad, because it felt like we were so ready for the next chapter and we had already invested four or five years into it,' Campbell says. 'So Sean ended up staying in the States, we moved back from Auckland to Christchurch, the quakes hit just a few months later, and that was the end of Atlas.' Campbell stayed involved in the local music scene after the quakes, helping put on live shows on portable stages around the city, before eventually moving into hospitality. Spotify arrived in New Zealand in 2012, Apple Music in 2015, and members of the band have periodically noticed that Atlas's back catalogue is nowhere to be found on any of the digital streamers. 'I believe it's because the licensing agreement with Warners expired and no one took ownership of the digital onboarding,' says Campbell. 'Spotify didn't exist when Crawl was released, so it has effectively fallen between the cracks.' Making things even more difficult is the fact that nobody knows where the original masters are for the album. 'Andy's going to have a search through his barn and see if there's a dusty old Atlas box somewhere,' Campbell laughs. In the meantime, they have a high quality ripped version of the CD waiting in the wings to be uploaded, but nobody knows quite how to proceed. 'Everything in the industry has changed completely from when I was in it,' says Campbell. 'I don't even know what the process is for setting up an Atlas Spotify account.' Warner Music are yet to respond to The Spinoff's inquiries about 'Crawl', but Campbell is hopeful they can bring the smash hit of 2007 to streaming platforms soon. 'It's actually been really motivating for us, because it was a really sad ending for Atlas. We had to just give up the dream and move on, so it's cool to know that people want to hear it.' Cunningham, whose voice has since recovered, even returned to Christchurch earlier this year and performed an acoustic version of 'Crawl'. Time for an Atlas reunion, perhaps? 'Now, wouldn't that be fun,' says Campbell. As for reformed emo Sachs, news of a 'Crawl' comeback couldn't come sooner. 'Look, we're back in an economic depression, and people are feeling just as emo as they were in 2007,' she says.


NZ Herald
4 days ago
- NZ Herald
A love letter to Aotearoa — in marimba
Luca Manghi, David Kelly and Steven Logan will tour as a trio with a new spiritual take on anatomy. Photo / Thomas Hamill Listening to articles is free for open-access content—explore other articles or learn more about text-to-speech. Luca Manghi, David Kelly and Steven Logan will tour as a trio with a new spiritual take on anatomy. Photo / Thomas Hamill 'I've had this idea,'' Steven Logan says, recalling a conversation with composer Claire Scholes. ''I really want to write you a xylophone arrangement of Dem Bones.'' Scholes's music is frequently playful – see, for example her Drag Concerto, which premiered last year with trumpeter Nick Hall dressed as his alter ego, Anita Wigl'it. Scholes's new arrangement of the old spiritual contains some theatricality, too. 'I get to shout and whoop and it's so much fun,' Logan says. Dem Bones is among the pieces Logan is taking on a brief northern tour with flautist Luca Manghi and pianist David Kelly. Orchestral concertgoers will know Logan as principal timpanist for the Auckland Philharmonia (Manghi is associate principal flute). However, as well as playing the full gamut of percussion – and other – instruments, he acts and sings, and he and a few of his orchestral colleagues have an R&B band, which may or may not reflect a childhood growing up in the US southeast: Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky. He didn't grow up in New Jersey but he loves Bruce Springsteen, and has a tattoo of the piano part to The Boss's Thunder Road to prove it. There is no Springsteen on the tour the trio are calling Masterworks for Marimba, Flute, & Piano, but people can expect other musical greats, including Fauré, Bernstein and Mozart, none of whom were noted for their marimba, flute and piano music. '[Mozart's] Fantasia [k.608] was written for organ, and we arranged it to work for the three of us,' Logan says. 'I opened it up in [composition software] Sibelius and I was like, this makes sense. That's obviously a flute line and this is obviously a piano line. That's obviously a marimba line. So, we are playing the notes as they are, but we found cool ways to use our combination of colours to rearrange the piece.' There's a selection of works by local composers, too, this time written to glove-fit the ensemble. Logan is especially excited by Cloud Piercer, a marimba solo written for him by Hannah Kagawa. A student at the University of Canterbury, Kagawa has been learning percussion with Justin DeHart, and is a young composer to keep an eye on. 'Yesterday, I was practising it and I'd got to the point where, okay, I've done the work I need to do. But then for another 45 minutes I kept playing the piece, just because it's beautiful.' The cloud piercer of the title is Aoraki Mt Cook. 'It feels like a love letter to the landscape,' says Logan, who recently became a New Zealand citizen. 'What's more Kiwi than having a Kiwi composer write about the landscape?' Masterworks for Marimba, Flute, & Piano, Christ Church Parish Hall, Russell, Aug 20; St Heliers Church & Community Hall, Auckland, Aug 31; Gallagher Academy Concert Chamber, Hamilton, Sept 10.


Scoop
13-08-2025
- Scoop
Student Art Exhibition Puts Partnership In The Frame
Press Release – University of Canterbury Work by Canterbury art students from two different institutions is hanging side-by-side in a new exhibition at CoCA Close to 40 students from Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha | University of Canterbury's Ilam School of Fine Arts and Ara Institute of Canterbury are exhibiting their work at the central Christchurch gallery this month. Whakawhanaungatanga 2025 is the second time that Ara and the University of Canterbury (UC) have collaborated in this way. The first Whakawhanaungatanga, in 2023, was one of the most visited exhibitions at CoCA that year. The name refers to the process of building and sustaining multi-layered, flexible and dynamic relationships, and the inaugural show came from a desire to foster creative collaboration between Ara and UC students. UC Fine Arts Senior Lecturer Louise Palmer says the exhibition is an opportunity for students to share their work with each other, the community, and the art world. Third-year UC painting student Vivien Silver-Hessey is exhibiting a ceramic piece called Can I be Your Favourite Mug? which she says explores themes of personhood and identity. 'It is a privilege to be able to exhibit as a young artist, especially while still studying, and at CoCA, one of Ōtautahi's oldest galleries, which has such a wide audience even beyond the local arts community.' Working with Ara students on the show has been fun and a great learning opportunity, Silver-Hessey says. 'It's exciting to make connections and talk to them about our work and theirs. Putting on this show has required good cooperation and communication, and by talking about our work, seeing and making connections between our practices, I think it's the beginning of the networking that's really important in our arts community.' Third-year UC sculpture student Sophie Brown is exhibiting Between Steel and Soil, a series of digitally-altered video works exploring the abandoned or barren parts of Eastern Christchurch. 'I'm feeling a mix of both excitement and nerves for the exhibition. There's a sense of vulnerability that comes with putting your art into a public space.' Brown says Whakawhanaungatanga is a vital step in her long-term goals. 'It will allow me to experiment with how an audience interacts with a space, sound and material. By installing in an open and shared environment, I can investigate the immersivity of the work through sensory experience; something that's integral to my practice.' Emma Foung is showing work made in partnership with Jack Freeman, another third-year UC graphic design student. She says they wanted to explore New Zealand graphic design through the local signwriting industry. 'Our work takes inspiration from what could be found outside of a corner dairy. It's in the form of a sandwich board which we pasted a Coca-Cola sponsorship underneath and then a hand-painted a 'milk' sign painted over the top, inspired by local signwriters. 'By kind of inverting the way that corporate sponsorship operates, we are trying to comment on how corporations assert their branding over what was a form of New Zealand graphic design.' Ara Kaiako (teacher) Oliver Perkins says Whakawhanaungatanga is an opportunity for Ara ākonga (students) to make connections outside their immediate environment. 'Hopefully these relationships become longer lasting, providing networks of support, opportunity, and friendship.' Whakawhanaungatanga 2025 is at CoCA gallery until 24 August. Some of the artists will give public talks about their work on Thursday 14 August and Thursday 21 August at 3pm.