Auckland University Old Arts Building (1923–6)
A ‘Maori Gothic’, ‘un-British’ pile
Poet A.R.D. Fairburn suggested that Roy Lippincott and Edward Billson’s design would scare old ladies in the park. The Education Board’s architect, who liked boring single-storey primary schools with more corridor than character, called it ‘un-British and out of harmony with our national character’. Minister of Education C.J. Parr wondered if it would look better without the tower. Others ridiculed it as ‘Maori Gothic’ or a wedding cake.
Fortunately the university bureaucracy stood its ground and stuck with this Gothic-inspired amalgam of medieval and modern designs. Enjoy the New Zealand details - the stone flax-seed pods, the ponga fronds, the kākā and kea - and see whether you agree with historian Keith Sinclair that ‘it is one of the few examples of visually successful architectural siting in the city’. Like naughty Victorian seaside postcards in a museum, the once-controversial Old Arts Centre, now better known as the Clock Tower, basks in a respectability confirmed by its presence on the dust jacket of the university’s official history.
Further information
This site is item number 83 on the History of New Zealand in 100 Places list.
On the ground
Limited public access.
Websites
- Heritage New Zealand List
- Auckland University places of interest
- History of the Clock Tower (video)
- University of Auckland heritage trail (PDF)
Books
- Keith Sinclair, A history of the University of Auckland 1883-1983, Auckland University Press/Bridget Williams Books, Auckland, 1983
Community contributions