
Looking sharp: That cool house on the corner
Covid lockdowns, a tricky triangular site and an old building with lots of unknowns - the road to this dream home was anything but smooth. But the ambitious project has resulted in a former corner store on one of Dunedin's busiest feeder routes being given a new lease of life.
During World War 2, the single-storey shop - built to the boundary on both its street frontages - was operated by a Miss E.A. Sector.
Later, it became a quirky flat with a bedroom right next to the footpath at the intersection of Royal Tce and Heriot Row.
When they first saw the building advertised in 2013, the current owners fell in love with its angular shape and clinker brick cladding.
Caroline Terpstra says she and husband Geoff were living in Maori Hill but were ready for a new challenge and a property that required less maintenance. Adding to the appeal: they had just returned from Europe, where they enjoyed staying in central city apartments and "being part of the action".
When the building went on the market, the pair requested information but heard nothing back. Later, they sent a letter to the new owner and in 2017, they got a call "out of the blue" in which he explained his circumstances had changed and he was selling up.
To make the project work financially, the couple needed to keep the ground floor as a rental.
The initial plan was to add two levels above the shop but this proved too expensive so instead, they bought the neighbouring property in Heriot Row. This allowed them to build across the existing garage at the back of the former shop, limiting the development to one additional level and making the project affordable. It also gave them valuable set-down space for materials during construction.
Their offer on the neighbouring property was accepted just as New Zealand entered its first Covid lockdown - a "stressful" time because they didn't know if the University of Otago would remain open and if the flat's existing student tenants would stay.
Problems finding a builder delayed the start of the project, which meant that after selling their house, they had to spend two and-a-half years renting.
Add in several other curve balls - including escalating building costs and material shortages - and it was the "perfect negative storm".
Mr Terpstra, an architectural designer who drew up plans for the project, says the aim was to respect the heritage architecture while clearly demarcating between old and new so the history of the site could be easily read.
At ground level, they kept all but one of the shop's window and door openings. Above this, the materials are clearly different but the dark metal cladding was designed to tie into the iron oxide colouring of the original bricks, and the roof shape references the gable roofs of the neighbourhood.
Although the area was zoned residential 1, the Dunedin City Council recognised there had long been a building on the boundary and did not enforce the usual 4.5m setbacks from each road frontage, which would have halved the buildable area.
The biggest challenge was working with the building's triangular shape, which made the placement of interior walls, and the design and build of the roof, especially tricky.
"The 'sides' of the triangle are dictated by the roads and are at different angles in relation to the back of the triangle," Mr Terpstra says. "Internal partitions were built either parallel or at 90deg to the [back wall] as the most efficient way to divide the spaces ... However, all areas with exterior walls, except for our bedroom and bathroom, have an angled wall following the line of one of the road frontages, making for quirky and interesting spaces."
The ground floor flat, not including a small outdoor amenity space, is just 49sq m while the interior of the apartment, excluding the garage and entry, is only 105sq m. But both believe challenges like this lead to better design outcomes.
In his professional life, Mr Terpstra particularly enjoys renovation work and finding "hidden" space that homeowners don't necessarily see.
"I quite like having constraints. You have to think about things a lot harder and, generally speaking, the solutions you come up with are much better."
To make his own two-bedroom apartment feel spacious, he drew an open-plan kitchen, dining and living area, with a pitched, 4.8m ceiling. Circulation space is minimal, materials were kept consistent and every inch of space was used efficiently. For example, the kitchen runs along one wall and the end of the hall serves as an office.
The keen gardeners were even able to include a west-facing terrace and a small garden.
Working on the existing building was a "mission" because it was so well constructed, with two courses of bricks separated by a cavity, Mr Terpstra says. The triangle was tied together at the top by a concrete bond beam, on which the parapet sat.
Before remodelling the ground floor flat, the director of Lowrise Design stripped the interior himself so he could recover the rimu rafters and beams. He then used them to build a slatted dividing screen and some of the stairs.
Mrs Terpstra, formerly head of design at Otago Polytechnic and now its director of academic excellence, says a green, "end-of-run" carpet became the starting point for the interior scheme and a nod to the mid-century style they like. Six glass and rimu light shades they had been storing in sheds for 25 years, waiting to be used somewhere, hang from the living room's plywood veneer ceiling.
Although it has taken them time to get used to the traffic noise in the area, the couple like that they rarely have to use a car themselves and that they live in a diverse neighbourhood with residents of varying ages. Many of them have been positive about the building's transformation.
"Part of our reason for keeping it was that even though it was built in 1944, that's 80 years ago and it's quite an old building now," Mr Terpstra says. "But it's also one of those ordinary little shops that everyone had on their corner, a reminder of what neighbourhoods used to be like, and we thought that was worth saving.
"It's a house we enjoy living in because it's not rectilinear and it's not straight-forward. It's given us an appreciation of quirky sites and spaces and what you can do with them. And there's a lot of undiscovered spaces like that in a city."
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Otago Daily Times
20 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
‘It is my life's work': National Transport and Toy Museum on show for 30 years
When Gerald and Jason Rhodes bought 16 acres of land beside the Wānaka Airport 32 years ago, they had a vision much more imaginative than what could be seen of the barren block. While the father and son had large imaginations, they could not foresee the hangar full of aircraft, the cases full of Barbie dolls, the classic car collection of over 600, and a train set that could rival Sir Rod Stewart's. "Everything evolves and it starts somewhere but nothing ever stays still. Our idea was that it had to be able to evolve. We had an assortment of trucks, cars, aircraft and the toys grew very rapidly on the side," Jason Rhodes said. The National Transport and Toy Museum turns over the amount of customers in a few days what it did in a year when it first began. Mr Rhodes said they averaged about 45,000 people through their doors a year, but this needed to keep growing to cover costs. Gerald died over a decade ago, and Jason and daughter, Debbie Rhodes, continue the legacy and what has become the southern hemisphere's largest private collection open to the public. The museum started with 100 vehicles sourced from auctions, flea markets and private collections. They now have over 600. Add in a Chatham Islands plane, cars used on movies sets such as The World's Fastest Indian, bulldozers, and car brands dating back through the years. Gerald started his career with International Harvester and then went on to establish a car and truck wrecking business in Christchurch, meaning he was always in the right place to pick up new items for his collection. Wānaka was chosen as the home for the collection for the dry climate, which helps preserve the machinery. "He always wanted to do something and was involved in the airshow in the very first stages so he supplied a lot of the ground support and that sort of thing, so we based a section down here," Jason said. The museum has had its challenges; the global financial crisis and Covid-19 both sent it into dormant periods. The Wānaka Airport, owned by the Queenstown Lakes District Council, had not made the friendliest of neighbours at times, at least the bureaucratic strand of it, he said. "They have tried their hardest to move us on. We have become big enough and ugly enough that we are in the too hard basket nowadays. Moving a place like this, the building is the easy part, then you've got the objects. "The aircraft are large and machinery can be over 100 tonne a piece and then there are the hundreds and thousands of small pieces, that you have to package up, and rehouse — that wouldn't be a fun exercise." The museum opened to the public on December 26, 1995, and will officially turn 30 at the end of the year, although it has been under way for 32 years if you include preparing it for public. At that time, it was just the main building and Hangar 1, which was built to look like the aviation hangars used in the 1940s with authentic doors from Christchurch Airport. In April 2004, the Fire Station was added, followed in December 2005 by Hangar 2, to house military collectables, planes and motorbikes. Jason said the cabinetry and displays were often more expensive than the objects themselves, but you could not put a price on fun. "We have tried to source something for everyone, no matter where you come from, from what world and what age, genders. There is generally something that you will latch on to." He believed his father would be proud of the place it had become today, and the feedback it got. "His passion was enjoying seeing people enjoy things. "Talking to the people as they go out, a lot of people aren't sure what they are in for, but it is on the way out you get those conversations and that's the best part." Sister Debbie said her brother had inherited some of their father's tendencies. "He's got a love of hoarding; he's got dad's bug." Jason said he did not believe museums were a dying breed as the proof was the amount of money local and central government were willing to put into them. "It doesn't matter where you go around the world, museums are part of society, they show us where we are going and where we have come from." "It is my life's work. There is not a hell of a lot out there that would be this old in Wānaka."


Otago Daily Times
2 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Looking sharp: That cool house on the corner
A Dunedin couple tell Kim Dungey how they overcame the odds to create one of the city's most unique homes. Covid lockdowns, a tricky triangular site and an old building with lots of unknowns - the road to this dream home was anything but smooth. But the ambitious project has resulted in a former corner store on one of Dunedin's busiest feeder routes being given a new lease of life. During World War 2, the single-storey shop - built to the boundary on both its street frontages - was operated by a Miss E.A. Sector. Later, it became a quirky flat with a bedroom right next to the footpath at the intersection of Royal Tce and Heriot Row. When they first saw the building advertised in 2013, the current owners fell in love with its angular shape and clinker brick cladding. Caroline Terpstra says she and husband Geoff were living in Maori Hill but were ready for a new challenge and a property that required less maintenance. Adding to the appeal: they had just returned from Europe, where they enjoyed staying in central city apartments and "being part of the action". When the building went on the market, the pair requested information but heard nothing back. Later, they sent a letter to the new owner and in 2017, they got a call "out of the blue" in which he explained his circumstances had changed and he was selling up. To make the project work financially, the couple needed to keep the ground floor as a rental. The initial plan was to add two levels above the shop but this proved too expensive so instead, they bought the neighbouring property in Heriot Row. This allowed them to build across the existing garage at the back of the former shop, limiting the development to one additional level and making the project affordable. It also gave them valuable set-down space for materials during construction. Their offer on the neighbouring property was accepted just as New Zealand entered its first Covid lockdown - a "stressful" time because they didn't know if the University of Otago would remain open and if the flat's existing student tenants would stay. Problems finding a builder delayed the start of the project, which meant that after selling their house, they had to spend two and-a-half years renting. Add in several other curve balls - including escalating building costs and material shortages - and it was the "perfect negative storm". Mr Terpstra, an architectural designer who drew up plans for the project, says the aim was to respect the heritage architecture while clearly demarcating between old and new so the history of the site could be easily read. At ground level, they kept all but one of the shop's window and door openings. Above this, the materials are clearly different but the dark metal cladding was designed to tie into the iron oxide colouring of the original bricks, and the roof shape references the gable roofs of the neighbourhood. Although the area was zoned residential 1, the Dunedin City Council recognised there had long been a building on the boundary and did not enforce the usual 4.5m setbacks from each road frontage, which would have halved the buildable area. The biggest challenge was working with the building's triangular shape, which made the placement of interior walls, and the design and build of the roof, especially tricky. "The 'sides' of the triangle are dictated by the roads and are at different angles in relation to the back of the triangle," Mr Terpstra says. "Internal partitions were built either parallel or at 90deg to the [back wall] as the most efficient way to divide the spaces ... However, all areas with exterior walls, except for our bedroom and bathroom, have an angled wall following the line of one of the road frontages, making for quirky and interesting spaces." The ground floor flat, not including a small outdoor amenity space, is just 49sq m while the interior of the apartment, excluding the garage and entry, is only 105sq m. But both believe challenges like this lead to better design outcomes. In his professional life, Mr Terpstra particularly enjoys renovation work and finding "hidden" space that homeowners don't necessarily see. "I quite like having constraints. You have to think about things a lot harder and, generally speaking, the solutions you come up with are much better." To make his own two-bedroom apartment feel spacious, he drew an open-plan kitchen, dining and living area, with a pitched, 4.8m ceiling. Circulation space is minimal, materials were kept consistent and every inch of space was used efficiently. For example, the kitchen runs along one wall and the end of the hall serves as an office. The keen gardeners were even able to include a west-facing terrace and a small garden. Working on the existing building was a "mission" because it was so well constructed, with two courses of bricks separated by a cavity, Mr Terpstra says. The triangle was tied together at the top by a concrete bond beam, on which the parapet sat. Before remodelling the ground floor flat, the director of Lowrise Design stripped the interior himself so he could recover the rimu rafters and beams. He then used them to build a slatted dividing screen and some of the stairs. Mrs Terpstra, formerly head of design at Otago Polytechnic and now its director of academic excellence, says a green, "end-of-run" carpet became the starting point for the interior scheme and a nod to the mid-century style they like. Six glass and rimu light shades they had been storing in sheds for 25 years, waiting to be used somewhere, hang from the living room's plywood veneer ceiling. Although it has taken them time to get used to the traffic noise in the area, the couple like that they rarely have to use a car themselves and that they live in a diverse neighbourhood with residents of varying ages. Many of them have been positive about the building's transformation. "Part of our reason for keeping it was that even though it was built in 1944, that's 80 years ago and it's quite an old building now," Mr Terpstra says. "But it's also one of those ordinary little shops that everyone had on their corner, a reminder of what neighbourhoods used to be like, and we thought that was worth saving. "It's a house we enjoy living in because it's not rectilinear and it's not straight-forward. It's given us an appreciation of quirky sites and spaces and what you can do with them. And there's a lot of undiscovered spaces like that in a city."


NZ Herald
2 days ago
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Perpetual Guardian chief Patrick Gamble about his hard lessons in property investing
Gamble grew up in a working-class family living in Dublin and South Dunedin. He has headed up the estate planning and wealth management firm since 2020. In that time, he has overseen the high-profile move by owner Andrew Barnes to introduce a four-day working week. Talking on the Money Talks podcast, he reflects on wealth and investment and what he has learned about it through his own experience. Gamble studied law at the University of Otago on the assumption that it was a pathway to wealth and got into property investment as soon as he started earning a decent wage. 'As a graduate lawyer, I used that money to buy a couple of investment properties really early on,' Gamble says. 'You sort of buy one, the market goes up, you leverage the difference, then buy a second one.' The lending rules were a bit looser in those days (the early 2000s), he recalls. Growing up, his parents didn't have a lot of money. He recalls his father working 50 hours a week at the freezing works just to break even with the dole and the financial pressure on the family during a strike. 'But they were very entrepreneurial,' he says. When his mother started working in the 1990s, they invested in student flats. 'They'd leveraged heavily to buy some flats,' he says. 'I had to work every second weekend with Dad on those flats. 'We hated it. Dad was obsessed with cleaning up after all these students. You'd own one in a block of 12, but you'd end up cleaning up after all 12 sets of students.' But despite that, Gamble followed in their footsteps as a property investor. 'I had no business doing it,' he says. 'I didn't actually know what I was doing. But I left university relatively wealthy on paper, certainly by the standards I had then.' At that point, he headed off to Ireland, where he had spent a portion of his childhood, to have his OE and work as a lawyer. 'When I came back to New Zealand at 30, I was at zero because those properties were so far underwater,' he says. 'I had worked incredibly hard through my twenties, and I'd been well paid. All the money I'd earned in Ireland, and in Malta and other places, all of it was wiped out.' Some people do make a lot of money out of property investment, 'but it is a game that burns a lot of people along the way,' he says. 'And those stories aren't talked about much.' In part, Gamble was caught by timing, being hit by the Global Financial Crisis. But there were other issues, he admits. 'One of the places I'd bought, a gang moved in, a close-by school shut down. These are the risks.' It went from being a desirable area for young families to one where the families all left, he says. Prices went down. 'If you read a book on property investment, this is the first thing they'll tell you. But when you're young, or just a bit naive, you just think property only goes one way,' he says. 'It's definitely not a one-way bet. You can lose money on property, and ... the bank is not your friend when things are not going well. 'When you're borrowing, they're very keen to lend. And then when you fall below an LVR [loan-to-value ratio] threshold, you're dealing with very different people'. The thing for potential property investors to be aware of is how involved in the property you need to be, he says. 'The mistake that I made, the thing that really burned me, was when I went to Ireland, I basically just left them with a property manager and thought it would all be fine. Rent came in and bills went out. 'But what I didn't realise was all this other stuff happening around the properties that was driving their value down. I wasn't seeing the New Zealand market.' Property isn't something that you can just put a substantial chunk of life savings into and then just forget about it in the way that you can KiwiSaver or a managed fund, he says. 'You have to actively be a property manager or a landlord. You've got to treat it like a job. And most people don't have the time for that. 'If you are fully committed to it, sure, there are lots of people who still manage to make money. But there are better investments for people who don't have the time.' These days, it's Gamble's job – leading Perpetual Guardian – to manage family investments and wealth long term, although he doesn't specifically handle the investing side. Perpetual Guardian's primary role is to look after people's interests when they're no longer able to look after themselves, he says. 'That's our fundamental job as a fiduciary and as a trustee. So if they've passed away and they left things behind them in any sort of difficulty, we can step in. 'But we also help people grow their money throughout their lives. We invest in people. We run a lot of funds. We run financial investments for people outside of our fund group as well.' Perpetual Guardian made global headlines in 2019 when owner Andrew Barnes decided to launch the four-day working week policy. 'That's still a thing,' Gamble says. The idea is that you try to streamline your days; you get rid of time-wasting things like long meetings and mucking about on your phone, he says. 'You try and get all your work done in four days that you would've done in five. And then you take the fifth day off. So it's not an idea that you are doing 80% of the work. It's the idea you're doing 100% of the work, you're just doing it in 80% of the time.' But since Covid and the rise of remote working, the company also offers people the choice of working five days with three in the office and two at home. 'What Covid showed us is, for a lot of people, particularly in office work, you can work from home,' he says. 'You still can be efficient. You can monitor your staff, you can make sure that it doesn't all fall apart.' In all the big centres, that is increasingly the preferred option, he says. 'You know, if you're in Auckland and you've gotta drive 45 minutes to work, it's just better to have two days not having to do that. 'The focus that we have is trying to allow people to have the flexibility in their job; to still live their lives and not be stuck having to get a babysitter in because they can't leave work and log in two hours later.' Outside of his own work hours, Gamble has taken on the important role as honorary consul for Ukraine in New Zealand. His wife is from the east of Ukraine and has been in New Zealand for 17 years, but his brother-in-law has been drafted and is fighting. 'When the war started, it was very personal for us,' he says. Gamble says he was on the periphery of work his wife was doing, but when the ambassador, based in Canberra, wanted to appoint an honorary consul, he stepped up. 'They wanted a New Zealander because their main focus is trying to create links between their Government and the New Zealand Government, their businesses and New Zealand businesses.' The goal is to try to maintain media coverage, political coverage, and keep the war in the public consciousness, he says. 'It's not a hard sell. The New Zealand Government – both sides of the House – have been very, very supportive. 'New Zealand has made economic contributions, it's made humanitarian contributions, it has made some military contributions through training,' he says. 'I would obviously advocate that we could be and should be doing more. I think it's very much in our self-interest. I think Ukraine is an absolute horrendous precedent for a country as isolated as New Zealand.' In New Zealand, it is easy to forget how much we rely on the international rules-based order for absolutely everything in our lives, he says. 'From fuel that runs our trucks to harvest our food, everything in our world relies on the fact that you can ship goods or fly goods into New Zealand unmolested. If we let that rules-based order fracture, New Zealand is in a very difficult position.' Three years in, the Ukrainian conflict has become a war of attrition, Gamble says. 'That's very much by design from the Russian perspective, because they're much happier taking casualties than the Ukrainians are. There haven't been the wins that they enjoyed in the first few months. Things become static. 'Then at the same time, you've had other conflicts around the world. There is only so much in the attention span. 'So that is part of the work [as consul] – to make sure that the right people, who can influence change and decision making, are still talking about it. Listen to the full episode to hear more from Money Talks is a podcast run by the NZ Herald. It isn't about personal finance and isn't about economics – it's just well-known New Zealanders talking about money and sharing some stories about the impact it's had on their lives and how it has shaped them. The series is hosted by Liam Dann, business editor-at-large for the Herald. He is a senior writer and columnist, and also presents and produces videos and podcasts. He joined the Herald in 2003. Money Talks is available on iHeartRadio, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.