Schedules to Decision 9.3.7 Appendices Appendix 9.3.7.2

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Schedules to Decision 9.3.7 Appendices Appendix 9.3.7.2 Schedules to Decision 877 9.3.7 Appendices Appendix 9.3.7.2 - SCHEDULE OF SIGNIFICANT HISTORIC HERITAGE Explanatory note: Where heritage settings contain multiple heritage items, these have been grouped together using thicker lines in the table below and a collective name for the scheduled historic heritage is also noted. Street Address Other Location Description and/or Name Heritage Heritage Scheduled Group Heritage Heritage Planning Addresses Item Setting Interiors Group 1 – NZ Aerial Map Number Number Highly Pouhere Map Number Significant Taonga Number Group 2 - Heritage Significant List number & registratio n type 23 Abberley St Albans Abberley Park 31 N/A Significant 677 32; H7 Crescent 30 Acacia Avenue 74 Upper Former Dwelling and Setting, 27 200 Significant 1824 28 38 Middleton Riccarton Middleton Category 2 Road, 47A Arthur Street 33 Aikmans Road Merivale Elmwood School War 326 439 Significant 82 31; H6 Memorial and Setting 63 Aldwins Road Linwood Dwelling and Setting 28 392 Significant 579 338 39 Category 2 Armagh Street, Central City Armagh Street Kerbstones 619 315 Highly 228 32; H16 between and Setting Significant Durham- Oxford Armagh Street, Central City Armagh Street Bridge and 219 583 Highly 1830 232 32; H16 between Setting Significant Category 2 Durham- Oxford 25 Armagh Street Central City Dwelling and Setting, Red 35 280 Highly 3703 175 32; H15 House Significant Category 1 Supplementary Definitions decision and minor corrections Schedules to Decision 878 Street Address Other Location Description and/or Name Heritage Heritage Scheduled Group Heritage Heritage Planning Addresses Item Setting Interiors Group 1 – NZ Aerial Map Number Number Highly Pouhere Map Number Significant Taonga Number Group 2 - Heritage Significant List number & registratio n type 32 Armagh Street 325 Central City Former Dwelling and Setting 390 287 Significant 184 32; H15 Montreal Street 56 Armagh Street Central City Dwelling and Setting 40 299 Significant 3116 201 32; H15 Category 2 85 Armagh Street Central City Former Magistrates Court 41 316 Highly 5308 231 32; H16 and Setting Significant Category 1 Victoria Square 89 Armagh Street 100 Kilmore Central City Queen Victoria 523 318 Highly 1916 247 32; H16 Street Statue/Canterbury Jubilee Significant Category 2 Memorial and Setting 89 Armagh Street 100 Kilmore Central City Horse Watering Ramp and 621 318 Significant 683 32; H16 Street Setting 100 Kilmore Street 89 Armagh Central City The Christchurch Town Hall 311 318 Scheduled Highly 237 32; H16 Street and Setting interior heritage Significant fabric identified in Register of Interior Heritage Fabric 89 Armagh Street 100 Kilmore Central City Captain James Cook Statue 524 318 Highly 1860 240 32; H16 Kilmore Street Street and Setting Significant Category 2 89 Armagh Street 100 Kilmore Central City Bowker Fountain and Setting 527 318 Highly 246 32; H16 Street Significant 100 Kilmore Street 89 Armagh Central City Floral Clock and Setting 526 318 Significant 234 32; H16 Street 89 Armagh Street 100 Kilmore Central City K2 Telephone Box and 528 318 Significant 248 32; H16 Street Setting Supplementary Definitions decision and minor corrections Schedules to Decision 879 Street Address Other Location Description and/or Name Heritage Heritage Scheduled Group Heritage Heritage Planning Addresses Item Setting Interiors Group 1 – NZ Aerial Map Number Number Highly Pouhere Map Number Significant Taonga Number Group 2 - Heritage Significant List number & registratio n type 100 Kilmore Street 89 Armagh Central City Former Market Place 525 318 Highly 1832 684 32; H16 Street Bridge/Hamish Hay Bridge Significant Category 2 and Setting 9A Aubrey Street Akaroa Dwelling and Setting 663 498 Significant 3345 500 77; H37 Category 2 6 Aubrey Street Akaroa Dwelling and Setting, 743 91 Significant 5294 487 77; H37 South Betchworth Category 2 16 Aubrey Street Akaroa Dwelling and Setting (note 1037 42 Significant 482 77; H37 South the setting on the north east side of the building ends at the concrete retaining wall on that side) Avon River 60, 78, 80 Central City Rhododendron Island and 399 576 Significant 206 39; H19 between Cambridge Setting Montreal- Terrace Cambridge Avon River 71 Hereford Central City Mill Island and Setting 608 578 Significant 224 32; H16 between Street, 110 Hereford- Cambridge Worcester Terrace 31 Aylmers Valley Akaroa Dwelling and Setting 1042 33 Significant 507 77; H37 Road 8A Balmoral Lane Redcliffs Te Ana o Hineraki/Moa Bone 351 613 Highly 703 48 and Point Cave and Setting Significant 8B (underground heritage item) 136 Barbadoes 140 Central City Cathedral of the Blessed 46 N/A Highly 47 301 39; H20 Street Barbadoes Sacrament Significant Category 1 Street 181 Barbadoes Central City Former Community of the 50 364 Highly 4387 646 39; H20 Street Sacred Name and Setting Significant Category 1 Supplementary Definitions decision and minor corrections Schedules to Decision 880 Street Address Other Location Description and/or Name Heritage Heritage Scheduled Group Heritage Heritage Planning Addresses Item Setting Interiors Group 1 – NZ Aerial Map Number Number Highly Pouhere Map Number Significant Taonga Number Group 2 - Heritage Significant List number & registratio n type 391 Barbadoes 357 Central City Barbadoes Street Cemetery 603 365 Highly 652 32; H11 Street Cambridge and Setting Significant Terrace, 351 Cambridge Terrace, 389 Barbadoes Street 12 Barclays Road Little River Former Little River Railway 1183 538 Scheduled Significant 7681 462 69 Station and Setting interior heritage Category 2 fabric identified in Register of Interior Heritage Fabric 270 Barrington Barrington Barrington Park Gates 1377 N/A Significant 792 38 Street 14 Bass Street Linwood Dwelling and Setting 51 394 Significant 1876 340 39 Category 2 Beach Road, Akaroa Akaroa Lighthouse and 701 547 Highly 3343 479 77; H37 between Setting Significant Category 2 Aylmers Valley- Hempleman Beach Road, Akaroa The Akaroa Boating Club 1230 529 Significant 481 77; H37 between Boatshed and Setting Bruce-Aylmers Valley Supplementary Definitions decision and minor corrections Schedules to Decision 881 Street Address Other Location Description and/or Name Heritage Heritage Scheduled Group Heritage Heritage Planning Addresses Item Setting Interiors Group 1 – NZ Aerial Map Number Number Highly Pouhere Map Number Significant Taonga Number Group 2 - Heritage Significant List number & registratio n type Beach Road, Akaroa Beach Road Bridge and 693 501 Significant 7193 489 77; H37 between Setting Category 2 Bruce-Aylmers Valley Beach Road, Akaroa Trypots and Setting 1035 527 Significant 529 77; H36 between Jolie- Church Beach Road, Akaroa French Landing Site and 1027 528 Highly 531 77; H36 between Jolie- Setting Significant Church Akaroa Main Wharf Area Beach Road, Akaroa Wharfinger's Office and 1033 526 Scheduled Significant 497 77; H37 between Setting interior heritage Church-Bruce fabric identified in Register of Interior Heritage Fabric Beach Road, Akaroa Seat, Shelter and Setting, 1202 526 Significant 502 77; H37 between The Fisherman's Rest Church-Bruce 82 Beach Road Akaroa Cannon and Setting 1201 526 Significant 494 77; H37 Beach Road Akaroa Main Wharf and Setting 1137 526 Significant 480 77; H37 65 Beach Road Akaroa Commercial Building and 1138 482 Significant 519 77; H37 Setting Supplementary Definitions decision and minor corrections Schedules to Decision 882 Street Address Other Location Description and/or Name Heritage Heritage Scheduled Group Heritage Heritage Planning Addresses Item Setting Interiors Group 1 – NZ Aerial Map Number Number Highly Pouhere Map Number Significant Taonga Number Group 2 - Heritage Significant List number & registratio n type 67 Beach Road Akaroa Commercial Building and 1030 497 Significant 517 77; H37 Setting 69 Beach Road Akaroa Former Dwelling and Setting 1031 14 Significant 514 77; H37 71 Beach Road 73 Beach Akaroa Commercial Building and 1032 496 Significant 508 77; H37 Road Setting 81 Beach Road Akaroa Commercial Building and 1036 178 Significant 495 77; H37 Setting 99 Beach Road Akaroa Former Dwelling/Hotel and 662 99 Significant 1712 491 77; H37 Setting Category 2 28 Bealey Avenue Central City Knox Church Interior 53 N/A Significant 3723 158 32; H10 Category 2 82 Bealey Avenue Central City Former Dwelling and Setting 55 311 Significant 1939 211 32; H10 Category 2 1/2 Beveridge Central City Dwelling and Setting 395 290 Significant 191 32; H10 Street 18 Beveridge Central City Dwelling and Setting 60 304 Significant 3695 204 32; H10 Street Category 2 12 Blakes Road Belfast Dwelling and Setting, Spring 62 459 Highly 3811 265 12 Grove Significant Category 2 10A Bridle Path Lyttelton Dwelling and Setting, 1131 30 Significant 370 52; H31 Devonia 285 Bridle Path Heathcote Dwelling and Setting, 591 405 Significant 357 47 Road Ferrymead House 2 Brittan Terrace Lyttelton Dwelling and Setting/ 1133 7 Significant 365 52; H30 Former St Saviour's Vicarage Supplementary Definitions decision and minor corrections Schedules to Decision 883 Street Address Other Location Description and/or Name Heritage Heritage Scheduled Group Heritage Heritage Planning Addresses Item Setting Interiors Group 1 – NZ Aerial Map Number Number Highly Pouhere Map Number Significant Taonga Number Group 2 - Heritage Significant List number & registratio n type 230 Brougham Sydenham King Edward VII Coronation 68 326 Significant 250 39 Street Memorial Lamp and Drinking Fountain and Setting 51 Browns Road St Albans Dwelling and Setting, 70 449 Significant 1846 111 31 Chippenham Lodge Category
Recommended publications
  • Upper Riccarton Cemetery 2007 1
    St Peter’s, Upper Riccarton, is the graveyard of owners and trainers of the great horses of the racing and trotting worlds. People buried here have been in charge of horses which have won the A. J. C. Derby, the V.R.C. Derby, the Oaks, Melbourne Cup, Cox Plate, Auckland Cup (both codes), New Zealand Cup (both codes) and Wellington Cup. Area 1 Row A Robert John Witty. Robert John Witty (‘Peter’ to his friends) was born in Nelson in 1913 and attended Christchurch Boys’ High School, College House and Canterbury College. Ordained priest in 1940, he was Vicar of New Brighton, St. Luke’s and Lyttelton. He reached the position of Archdeacon. Director of the British Sailors’ Society from 1945 till his death, he was, in 1976, awarded the Queen’s Service Medal for his work with seamen. Unofficial exorcist of the Anglican Diocese of Christchurch, Witty did not look for customers; rather they found him. He said of one Catholic lady: “Her priest put her on to me; they have a habit of doing that”. Problems included poltergeists, shuffling sounds, knockings, tapping, steps tramping up and down stairways and corridors, pictures turning to face the wall, cold patches of air and draughts. Witty heard the ringing of Victorian bells - which no longer existed - in the hallway of St. Luke’s vicarage. He thought that the bells were rung by the shade of the Rev. Arthur Lingard who came home to die at the vicarage then occupied by his parents, Eleanor and Archdeacon Edward Atherton Lingard. In fact, Arthur was moved to Miss Stronach’s private hospital where he died on 23 December 1899.
    [Show full text]
  • How People Use Temporary Post-Disaster Open Spaces: a Study of Three Transitional Community-Initiated Open Spaces in Central Christchurch, New Zealand
    How people use temporary post- disaster open spaces: A study of three transitional community- initiated open spaces in central Christchurch, New Zealand Andreas Wesener Florian Risse LEaP Research Report No. 40 November 2015 How people use temporary post-disaster open spaces: A study of three transitional community-initiated open spaces in central Christchurch, New Zealand How people use temporary post-disaster open spaces: A study of three transitional community-initiated open spaces in central Christchurch, New Zealand How people use temporary post-disaster open spaces: A study of three transitional community- initiated open spaces in central Christchurch, New Zealand Land Environment and People Research Report No. 40 November 2015 ISSN 1172-0859 (Print) ISSN 1172-0891 (PDF) ISBN 978-0-86476-378-5 (Print) ISBN 978-0-86476-379-2 (PDF) Lincoln University, Canterbury, New Zealand i Reviewed by: Dr Roy Montgomery Senior Lecturer, Head of Department Department of Environmental Management Faculty of Environment, Society and Design Lincoln University, Canterbury, New Zealand Acknowledgements This research was funded by a Lincoln University, School of Landscape Architecture (SOLA) and Faculty of Environment, Society and Design (ESD) summer scholarship. We wish to thank Roy Montgomery for critically reviewing the report. Abstract The study contributes to a better understanding of utilisation and interaction patterns in post-disaster temporary urban open spaces. A series of devastating earthquakes caused large scale damages to Christchurch’s central city and many suburbs in 2010 and 2011. Various temporary uses have emerged on vacant post-earthquake sites including community gardens, urban agriculture, art installations, event venues, eateries and cafés, and pocket parks.
    [Show full text]
  • Reconnection to Cleared Site in Christchurch Architecture for the Rememberer
    Reconnection to Cleared Site in Christchurch Architecture for the Rememberer Abigail Michelle Thompson A thesis submitted in ful! lment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Architecture (professional), The University of Auckland, 2012 Fig 1: Project. Surface study model by author. Abstract The loss of life and buildings due to the devastating and continuing earthquakes in Canterbury (since 9th September, 2010) have created a need to examine the issue of memory with concerns to architecture in a New Zealand context. This thesis was initiated with concern to addressing the cleared (destroyed, demolished) buildings of Christchurch and architecture’s role in reconnecting Cantabrians mnemonically to the cleared sites in their city. This is an investigation of architecture’s ability to trigger memories in order to speci! cally address the disorientation experienced by Cantabrians subsequent to the loss of built fabric in their city. The design intention is to propose an architectural method for reconnecting people’s memories with site, which will have implications to other sites throughout the city of Christchurch. Consequently, two signi! cant sites of destruction have been chosen, the Methodist Church site at 309 Durham St (community) and the house at 69 Sherborne St (domestic). With the only original material left on these cleared sites being the ground itself, two issues were made apparent. Firstly, that ground should play a signi! cant role in substantiating the memory of the site(s), and secondly the necessary task of designing a mnemonic language without tangible links (other than ground). Collective memory is examined with regards to theory by Maurice Halbwachs, Piere Nora, and Peter Carrier.
    [Show full text]
  • Unsettling Recovery: Natural Disaster Response and the Politics of Contemporary Settler Colonialism
    UNSETTLING RECOVERY: NATURAL DISASTER RESPONSE AND THE POLITICS OF CONTEMPORARY SETTLER COLONIALISM A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BY STEVEN ANDREW KENSINGER IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY DR. DAVID LIPSET, ADVISER JULY 2019 Steven Andrew Kensinger, 2019 © Acknowledgements The fieldwork on which this dissertation is based was funded by a Doctoral Dissertation Fieldwork Grant No. 8955 awarded by the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. I also want to thank Dr. Robert Berdahl and the Berdahl family for endowing the Daphne Berdahl Memorial Fellowship which provided funds for two preliminary fieldtrips to New Zealand in preparation for the longer fieldwork period. I also received funding while in the field from the University of Minnesota Graduate School through a Thesis Research Travel Grant. I want to thank my advisor, Dr. David Lipset, and the members of my dissertation committee, Dr. Hoon Song, Dr. David Valentine, and Dr. Margaret Werry for their help and guidance in preparing the dissertation. In the Department of Anthropology at the University of Minnesota, Dr. William Beeman, Dr. Karen Ho, and Dr. Karen-Sue Taussig offered personal and professional support. I am grateful to Dr. Kieran McNulty for offering me a much-needed funding opportunity in the final stages of dissertation writing. A special thanks to my colleagues Dr. Meryl Puetz-Lauer and Dr. Timothy Gitzen for their support and encouragement. Dr. Carol Lauer graciously offered to read and comment on several of the chapters. My fellow graduate students and writing-accountability partners Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Christchurch Street Names: N - O
    Christchurch Street Names: N - O Current Former Origin of name Suburb Additional information See Source Further name name information Nabob Lane A nabob was a Cracroft Named to continue the Bengal Drive, Spreydon/Heathcote View the biography governor in India tradition of using Indian Chittagong Lane, Community Board of John Cracroft during the Mogul placenames as street names Darjeeling Place, agenda 7 September Wilson in the empire. Another in the locality. Delhi Place, 2004 Dictionary of New Indira Lane, Zealand Biography. meaning is a The last 30 sections of the Report of the wealthy man, Jahan Lane, Cracroft family estate, at Spreydon/Heathcote “Indians of especially one who Lucknow Place, 60 Worsleys Road, were Community Board to Cashmere”, The has made his Nehru Place, auctioned on 8 December the Council meeting of Press, 18 July 2009, fortune in the Sasaram Lane 2007. 23 September 2004 p D9 Orient. Sir John and Shalamar Cracroft-Wilson Named in 2004. Drive. Also The Port Hills of "Cracroft sections (1808-1881) was Cashmere. Christchurch, p 241 sell fast", The Press, often called 12 December 2007, "Nabob" Wilson or p C22 "the Nabob". Nacelle Road Named after the Wigram In the Wigram Skies Wigram Skies Riccarton/Wigram Wigram Skies nacelle, a cover subdivision. Community Board housing which Named to continue the agenda 6 August 2013 holds engines, aviation theme of street Minutes of the equipment or fuel names in the subdivision. Riccarton/Wigram on an aircraft. Named in 2013. Community Board 6 August 2013 Nairn Street Edenbridge Named after David Spreydon Edenbridge Street is first "Property sale", The G R Macdonald Street Nairn (1833-1916).
    [Show full text]
  • A History of the Barbadoes Street Cemetery
    A HISTORY OF THE BARBADOES S~REE~ 0EMET}~Y. (A) IR~RODUCTION. ( 1) G·eneral. A brief note on the location, division and religious composition of' the three cemeteries, and the signif­ icance of the Cemetery in the history of Christchurch. (2) Early European Settlement of Canterbury. A brief note on the early settlement of Christchurch, Banks Peninsula and the ~lains prior to the arrival of the Canterbury Pilgrims. / (3) Edward Gibbon Wakefield and an. exclusive Church of England Settlement. A brief note on Wakefield's idea of an exclusive Church of England settlemen~ in Canterbury. (4) The Siting and Surveying of Christchurch. A brief note on the acquisition: of land in Canterbury, the siting and Surveying of Christchurch by Captain ~oseph Thomas and Edward Jollie, and the provision made for cemetery reserves. (5) The Canterbury Pilgrims. A brief note on the arrival of the Canterbury Pilgrims, /) their first impressions, conditions, religious . G. composition and numbers. j (B) THE THREE CEMETERIES. (1851 - 1885). /' j (1) General. if< ·rr::!.o~Ac..T1or,j (1 - d . A brief note on the Church of Bngland, Dissenter.and Roman Catholic religious developMents during the early years and the provision made for ~esbyterian burials. Early burials and undertakers. (2) The Setting-up and nevelopment of the 8emeteries • ./ (a) ,Church of England Gemetery• ./(i) The F..arl y V'ears. / (ii) The Construcciion of the Mortuary Chapel. .iii) Consecreation of the Cemetery. j (iv) The Setting-up of the I;emetery Board. / (v) Rules and Regulations. ~ (vi) The laying out, boundaries, plans, registers and maintenance of the r;emetery, and extensions to the Cemetery.
    [Show full text]
  • Christchurch N
    Hello • Kia ora Good bye • Haere ra Bay Of Islands Welcome • Haere mai! Very well, thank you, ok • Kei te pai © 2010 maps.com Auckland Thank you • Ka pai T a uranga a NORTH How are you? • Kei te pehea koe? ISLAND Woman • wahine sman Se Ta Ocean • wainui NEW ZEALAND Wellington PORT EXPLORER NOTES SOUTH & SHOPPING GUIDE ISLAND Christchurch n Fiordland National Park Dunedin Pacific Ocea Christchurch NEW ZEALAND GENERAL INFORMATION Christchurch, the “Gate- HISTORY At the base of the hills of The Banks Peninsula, Christchurch is way to the South Island” is on the east coast and is sur- often described as the most English of New Zealand’s cities. Nestled beneath rounded by the province of Canterbury. The city is bor- the Southern Alps, Christchurch exists as a great South Pacific incongruity. dered by hills and the Pacific Ocean, and is situated on the Many statues honor persons with English names; and trams rattle past streets edge of the Canterbury Plains. Best known as the Garden with English names (Oxford, Worcester etc). It is easy to forget that this epit- City, the city is renowned for its expansive gardens and ome of Englishness is the capital of Te Wahipounamu, long-time ancestral tree-lined avenues. Christchurch’s unique blend of con- home of the Ngai Tahu. The first Europeans in Christchurch began building temporary and neo-gothic architecture sets the scene for a huts along the Avon River in 1851, but it was not until March 1862 that it was city that prides itself on arts, culture, festivals and events.
    [Show full text]
  • Julius Haast Towards a New Appreciation of His Life And
    JULIUS HAAST TOWARDS A NEW APPRECIATION OF HIS LIFE AND WORK __________________________________ A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in History in the University of Canterbury by Mark Edward Caudel University of Canterbury 2007 _______ Contents Acknowledgements ............................................................................................... i List of Plates and Figures ...................................................................................... ii Abstract................................................................................................................. iii Chapter 1: Introduction ........................................................................................ 1 Chapter 2: Who Was Julius Haast? ...................................................................... 10 Chapter 3: Julius Haast in New Zealand: An Explanation.................................... 26 Chapter 4: Julius Haast and the Philosophical Institute of Canterbury .................. 44 Chapter 5: Julius Haast’s Museum ....................................................................... 57 Chapter 6: The Significance of Julius Haast ......................................................... 77 Chapter 7: Conclusion.......................................................................................... 86 Bibliography ......................................................................................................... 89 Appendices ..........................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Characteristics of Visits to Christchurch Central City
    Characteristics of visits to Christchurch Central City Pedestrian Intercept Survey 2017 Rebekah Bisson 14444896 Sarah Kaynes 85613053 Mark Poskitt 96309478 Ebony-Jean Ta’avili 58933935 Phoebe Venz 97661745 Contents List of figures……………………………………………………………………2 Executive Summary…………………………………………………………… 3 Introduction and Context………………………………………………………4 Literature Review……………………………………………………………….5 Methodology……………………………………………………………………..6 Results and Discussion…………………………………………………………..7 Limitations……………………………………………………………………… 16 Conclusions and Recommendations……………………………………………17 References………………………………………………………………………..19 Appendices……………………………………………………………………….21 1 List of Figures Figure 1: Graph showing age of total respondents……………………………...8 Figure 2: Graph showing gender of total respondents…………………………..8 Figure 3: Graph showing main reason for being in the Central City……………9 Figure 4: Graph showing pedestrian safety levels……………………………….11 Figure 5: Table showing ease of parking………………………………………...11 Figure 6: Transport………………………………………………………………14 Figure 7: Progress and Development…………………………………………….15 Figure 8: Overall Impression……………………………………………………..16 2 Executive Summary Research Question: What are the experiences, perceptions, and motivations of pedestrians within the Christchurch Central City? Brief context ● In the wake of the 2010-2011 Canterbury Earthquake sequence, central Christchurch has changed significantly. In the last few years pedestrians and businesses have begun to return to the city centre. As such, there is a strong need to conduct an
    [Show full text]
  • Christ Church Cathedral Reinstatement Order 2020 the Following Documents Have Been Included in This Release
    Proactive Release The following Cabinet material has been proactively released by the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, on behalf of Hon Poto Williams, Associate Minister of Greater Christchurch Regeneration: Christ Church Cathedral Reinstatement Order 2020 The following documents have been included in this release: Title of Paper: Christ Church Cathedral Reinstatement Order 2020 (CAB-20-SUB-0409 refers) Title of Minute: Christ Church Cathedral Reinstatement Order 2020 (CAB-20-MIN-0409 refers) Title of Paper: Facilitation of Christ Church Cathedral’s Reinstatement (DEV-20-SUB-0058 refers) Title of Minute: Facilitation of Christ Church Cathedral’s Reinstatement (DEV-20-MIN-0058 refers) Report on Decisions Made in Approving the Draft Christ Church Cathedral Reinstatement Order 2020 Including the following submissions documents: Summary of Written Comments Christ Church Cathedral Reinstatement Order 2020 – Written Comments Christ Church Cathedral Reinstatement Review Panel’s Recommendations on the draft Order Some parts of this information release would not be appropriate to release and, if requested, would be withheld under the Official Information Act 1982 (the Act). Where this is the case, the relevant section of the Act that would apply has been identified. Where information has been withheld, no public interest has been identified that would outweigh the reasons for withholding it. Key to redaction code: • 9(2)(a), to protect the privacy of natural persons. • 9(2)(g)(i), to maintain the effective conduct of public affairs through the free and frank expression of opinion. • 9(2)(i), to enable commercial activities to be carried out by Ministers or the Crown, without prejudice or disadvantage.
    [Show full text]
  • Shooting Star: a Biography of a Bicycle
    SHOOTING STAR: A BIOGRAPHY OF A BICYCLE Geoff Mentzer 2 SHOOTING STAR: A BIOGRAPHY OF A BICYCLE Copyright © 2020 by Geoff Mentzer All rights reserved. 3 In a scientific study of various living species and machines, the most efficient at locomotion – that is, the least amount of energy expended to move a kilometre – was found to be a man on a bicycle. –SS Wilson, Scientific American, March 1973, Volume 228, Issue 3, 90 The Dandy Horse of 1818, said to be the first velocipede man-motor carriage. Sharp, Bicycles & Tricycles: An Elementary Treatise On Their Design And Construction, Longmans, Green, and Co, London, New York and Bombay, 1896, 147 4 INTRODUCTION AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS What began as a brief biograph of the author's forebear Walter William Curties soon doubled into a study of two men, and expanded into an account of early bicycle – and a little motoring – history in New Zealand. Curties is mostly invisible to history, while Frederick Nelson Adams – who rose to national pre-eminence in motoring circles – by his reticence and reluctance for public exposure is also largely overlooked. Pioneering New Zealand cycling and motoring history – commercial, industrial and social – have been variously covered elsewhere, in cursory to comprehensive chronicles. Sadly, factual errors that persist are proof of copy and paste research. As examples, neither Nicky Oates nor Frederick Adams' brother Harry was the first person convicted in New Zealand for a motoring offence, nor was the world's first bicycle brass band formed in New Zealand. It must be said, however, that today we have one great advantage, ie Papers Past, that progeny of the Turnbull Library in Wellington.
    [Show full text]
  • Exploring Around Christchurch 4 Days
    CARAVAN TOURS || WITH NZ4U2U Exploring around Christchurch 4 days Have a few days to spare. This itinerary follows some of the most amazing scenery on a trip through the alps to the beauty of New Zealand's west coast. Looking for a little bit of something we have included a trip to the quaint town of Akaroa, a French settlement known for its interesting history. © 2017 NZ4U2U.All rights reserved P a g e 1 | 6 CARAVAN TOURS || WITH NZ4U2U Day 1 Christchurch to Akaroa (2h) Christchurch is traditionally New Zealand's most English city – imagined, laid out, planned and even settled by decree over in England. It was built around its Christ Church Cathedral and Four Avenues, furnished with the University of Canterbury and Christ's College, peopled by the first four ships, and fitted out with Neo Gothic architecture and glorious English gardens; a bit of old England in the South Pacific. Of course, now, it is as Kiwi as anywhere in New Zealand, and a vibrant, international place with its own flair and style. So, park up and plan to spend the day enjoying this ever-changing locale. Christchurch is the South Island’s largest city, known for its beautiful public gardens, old world charm and architecture, and its quaint and very walkable city centre. Much of this changed in the 2011 earthquakes when so much of the city was lost. However, the city is rising to the challenges, quite literally, and it is now home to funky and unique pop up malls, dozens of new buildings, high street, designer and boutique shops, a world class art gallery and museum, and restaurants galore.
    [Show full text]