logo
Couple's church restoration gets historic places nod

Couple's church restoration gets historic places nod

RNZ News2 days ago
Michael Simpson working on the exterior of the Kakanui Church in Otago, which has now been granted a Category 1 heritage listing.
Photo:
Supplied/ Michael Simpson & Anna Miles
A Waitaki couple's six-year passion project to restore a landmark building has paid off, with the former Kakanui Church granted a top-tier heritage listing.
The 155-year old Gothic-style building in Otago was one of two surviving Presbyterian timber churches in New Zealand designed by prominent Scottish architect Robert Arthur Lawson.
Heritage New Zealand this month recognised it as a Category 1 historic place with "special or outstanding historical or cultural significance."
Michael Simpson said it had descended into "pretty bad shape" by the time he and his wife Anna Miles bought it in 2019.
"The parish church had battled for a few years because they had too many buildings and not enough money to do it up ... there was just a lot of deferred maintenance and like a lot of old buildings, it was hard to keep up with," he said.
"We thought, well, we can give it a crack. As sad as it looks ... I like doing up old wooden buildings. It didn't look too scary to me. It scared off a lot of other people. It probably should have really."
A Christmas carols event held in the Kakanui Church last year.
Photo:
Supplied/ Michael Simpson & Anna Miles
Simpson said they had worked to restore it "with no time frame", starting with repairing rotten wood in the sub-floor, and restoring the windows.
They gave the inside a fresh coat of paint, and more recently the couple turned their focus to the exterior, where they were stripping, refitting and painting the weatherboards.
"We're loving how it's starting to look," Simpson said.
Photo:
Supplied/ Michael Simpson & Anna Miles
The couple were also renovating two outbuildings - the Workers' Hut and Sunday School.
Simpson said locals had taken a keen interest in the project.
"The community was so happy that we were trying to save it. It's been amazing. We never sort of expected that," he said.
"We have the doors open when we're down there and anyone that wants to come in and have a look ... can do that. It's just been really nice to share it."
A fresh coat of paint on one side of the Kakanui Church, during the restoration.
Photo:
Supplied/ Michael Simpson & Anna Miles
Once the building was weather-tight and stable, Simpson said they had hosted a wedding, market days and gigs in the church.
They hoped to keep using it as a community hub.
"It's just such a thrill having life in the building and seeing people enjoy it," Simpson said.
Heritage New Zealand heritage assessment advisor Alison Breese described the church as having "outstanding aesthetic, architectural and historic significance."
"It's been a pleasure seeing the love and hard mahi the owners have put into it," she said.
Simpson said the restoration wasn't yet complete, but he and Miles were thrilled to have the building formally acknowledged and protected.
"All we wanted to do, with our airy fairy plans, was restore the building as well as [possibly] to give it a life after us. This justifies that feeling, and just adds another sort of string to the bow, recognising it's worth saving," he said.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter
curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Almost all sika deer culled in ambitious Russell Forest eradication project
Almost all sika deer culled in ambitious Russell Forest eradication project

RNZ News

time12 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Almost all sika deer culled in ambitious Russell Forest eradication project

Trailcam image of a sika hind at Ngaiotonga Reserve, south of Russell. Photo: DOC Just three sika deer remain in Russell Forest a year after an ambitious eradication project began, the Northland Regional Council says. Biosecurity group manager Don McKenzie said 64 deer had been removed so far along with about 500 goats. Any recoverable meat was distributed to local communities, he said. The Russell State Forest trial was launched in May 2024 at an estimated cost of $1.5 million. It was so far ahead of schedule and under budget. Critics have said local hunters should have been used, but McKenzie said experts with specialist equipment, such as thermal imaging drones, were required given the need to locate every last deer. The council earlier told RNZ the project, if successful in Russell Forest, could be expanded to the 13 other wild deer populations around Northland. A sika hind is captured by a trailcam in Russell State Forest. Photo: DOC Those populations were scattered between Kaiwaka, near the Auckland border, and the bush behind Kaitāia airport. The council said wild deer arrived in Northland in the 1980s and 1990s as a result of illegal releases and farm escapes. Unlike other parts of New Zealand, deer were not released in Northland by the acclimatisation societies of the 19th century, which meant numbers were still low enough to make eradication possible. Russell Forest had the region's only known population of sika deer, which were smaller and more elusive than the other species found around New Zealand. Earlier, Department of Conservation senior wild animal advisor Dave Carlton told RNZ deer had no natural predators in New Zealand, so numbers could grow rapidly. He said wild deer fed on forest plants, trees and seedlings, altering forest composition, removing food for native animals, and hindering regeneration. Carlton said Northland was the ideal region to aim for deer-free status because it was bordered by the sea on two sides and Auckland city on the other. Wild Deer Free Te Tai Tokerau is a partnership between the regional council, DOC, hapū and iwi - in this case Te Kapotai, Ngāti Kuta, Patukeha, Ngatiwai and hau kainga from Ngaiotonga - and the deer farming industry. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Iwi support name change for St Arnaud to Rotoiti
Iwi support name change for St Arnaud to Rotoiti

RNZ News

time12 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Iwi support name change for St Arnaud to Rotoiti

Descendants of Rangitāne o Wairau at Lake Rotoiti. Photo: Supplied/Rangitāne o Wairau Three iwi at the top of the South Island have put their support behind a proposal to change the name of the village of St Arnaud to Rotoiti. The move is supported by the iwis Rangitāne o Wairau, Ngāti Kuia and Ngāti Apa ki te Rā Tō. New Zealand Geographic Board secretary Wendy Shaw confirmed the board had received the proposal. "The proposer has been advised that they must consult further with the local community before the proposal can be processed further," Shaw said. The village of St Arnaud has a permanent population of slightly more than 100 people. It sits at the northern end of Lake Rotoiti in the Nelson Lakes and takes its name from the nearby St Arnaud range, which in turn takes its name from the French soldier and marshal Jacques Leroy de Saint Arnaud. Rangitāne o Wairau General Manager Corey Hebberd said the three iwi, all descending from the waka Kurahaupō, have a strong and proud connection to Rotoiti and the surrounding area. It's a specific area mentioned in their Treaty settlements. "Providing support to the name was just a no-brainer for us really. We know that it's an area that our people have long frequented for kai, it's a place that they've been sustained, but it's also a place that's along an important journey for us in terms of heading between Wairau and the coast and other parts of the South Island," Hebberd said. It's not the first attempt to change St Arnaud's name, another proposal was rejected in 2009 according to the Nelson Mail. Hebberd said Rangitāne did some research and were able to find records that showed the use of the name Rotoiti for the area long before St Arnaud. "So, we were able to come across a letter that one of our tūpuna Paraone Taitua sent to Governer Eyre in 1851 in which he references Rotoiti as that place name," Hebberd said. Annette Walker is part of a small group which made the current name change proposal to the Geographic Board. She is optimistic the change will happen and said it would be a huge milestone for the village. Walker called Jacques Leroy de St Arnaud a "dreadful man" and believed some residents would support a change to Rotoiti. "It's like a festering sore that still arises every now and then from the old residents of Lake Rotoiti and they still call it Rotoiti," she said. Jacques Leroy de Saint-Arnaud's wartime exploits in Algeria included suffocating 500 Arab tribesmen in a cave by sealing its exits. Hebberd said it's important to acknowledge some of the actions of the man, but the name Rotoiti would also be more reflective of the area itself. Hebberd said he grew up in the Wairau region and would frequently head up to Lake Rotoiti and the area near the lake was simply referred to by many as Rotoiti. "It's very infrequent that I hear it referred to as St Arnaud. I respect the fact that there will be community members who do call it St Arnaud and who have an affinity with that name, but given the past associated with that name and also the fact that it's so close Lake Rotoiti, the township sits on Lake Rotoiti it makes sense for the area to carry that name." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Wellington council creates intercom service in CBD
Wellington council creates intercom service in CBD

RNZ News

time12 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Wellington council creates intercom service in CBD

The $50,000 trial starts this week and will run for six to nine months. Photo: 123RF Wellington City Council has created 24/7 intercom service in the city's CBD to improve safety. The $50,000 trial, called 'Safety Points', starts this week and will run for six to nine months. It would see intercoms with large red buttons installed in three areas of the central city - Cuba Street, Courtenay Place and Dixon Street. Members of the public feeling unsafe can push the intercom buttons and talk to someone immediately, with access to the service running at all times of the day. People would be able to receive immediate guidance from the operator and co-ordinate help if needed. The safety points have been put in places in the sight of the existing CCTV network, so operators could monitor the person until they felt safe. Throughout the course of the trial data would be collected on how they were used, and the process behind them tested. City safety senior responsible officer Sehai Orgad said the safety points were part of a broader shift in how Wellington City Council was approaching public safety. "We've heard the concerns about feeling unsafe at night, and the Safety Points are a practical step we're taking to respond - visible, simple, and easy to use," Orgad said. "They're strategically located, and linked into our CCTV network so we can monitor what's happening and connect people to help when it's needed." Orgad said it was a new idea and that the council would learn as it developed the safety tool. "The Safety Points won't solve everything, but they are part of a more visible, co-ordinated, and people-focused safety presence in the city." The $50,000 cost of the trial included installation, integration into the council's CCTV network, and 24/7 operator support. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store