City Rail Link

Newsletter - November 2019

Newsletter - November 2019

Kauri cottage saved from demolition

 

One of Auckland’s oldest pioneer homes has been saved from demolition by City Rail Link and relocated 75 kilometres away in the historic Waikato community of Rangiriri.

The 19th century Kauri weatherboard cottage was built in Flower Street above the Mt Eden railway station where more modern offices and factories are now being salvaged and demolished for CRL.  

“Relocating the cottage is a great outcome,” said Sarah Sutherland, Environment Sustainability Manager for the Link Alliance, which is managing the Mt Eden demolition as part of its work to build the CRL tunnels and stations.

“Buildings like this are becoming less common, and Link Alliance and City Rail Link Ltd are committed to protecting New Zealand’s cultural and historic heritage for future generations,” Sutherland said.  

She describes the house as a “lovely example” of a typical late-19th century weatherboard cottage.  

The exact construction date is unknown. Some records indicate the cottage may have been built 143 years ago, in 1876. Its first family moved in at a time when Queen Victoria was New Zealand’s head of state, we were still a British colony, our isolation was just coming to an end with the opening of the first telegraphic communications cable under the Tasman Sea to Australia, and there was no such thing as the New Zealand All Black rugby team.

The cottage was transported by road overnight to Waikato. Ward Demolition managed the relocation and Managing Director Peter Ward says the shift was completed smoothly.

“After all these years the cottage still has good ‘bones’ and all our dots around planning and the shift on the night came together perfectly to move it safely. Everyone’s comes away with a good feeling that they’ve helped give the house a second life,” Mr Ward says. 

 
Nigel Horrocks