
Heritage advocates are outraged by the Government鈥檚 decision to remove protection of a derelict Wellington housing block, saying the building is 鈥減art of our story鈥 and could have been restored for a 鈥渞easonable cost鈥.
The move to strip the Gordon Wilson Flats of their heritage status was announced by RMA and Housing Minister Chris Bishop this morning, reigniting the capital鈥檚 heritage debate.
The flats have sat empty on The Terrace in central Wellington since being deemed earthquake-prone in 2012. Today鈥檚 decision clears a major hurdle for the building鈥檚 demolition.
Bishop said Cabinet has agreed to a Resource Management Act amendment specifically to delist the Wellington building.
鈥淭he amendment will remove the flats鈥 protected heritage status and will make its demolition a permitted activity under the RMA. This means the building can finally be demolished, without a resource consent.鈥
It will mean Victoria University of Wellington, which owns the building, will be able to demolish it to make way for its student accommodation plans which the Herald revealed last year.
Wellington City councillor Iona Pannett, who has long advocated for protection of the city鈥檚 character and heritage, said the announcement is 鈥渄eeply unfortunate鈥.
The Gordon Wilson Flats on The Terrace could soon be demolished. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Pannett previously lived in the flats herself and told 九一星空无限talk ZB this morning, 鈥淚t鈥檚 an amazing place to live, just absolutely fantastic, it would be fantastic for students and it should be restored鈥.
Wellington City Council voted last year to remove the heritage listing of the flats, opening up the option for demolition of the derelict building, but the listing couldn鈥檛 be removed without support of the Housing Minister.
Pannett said the brutalist flats are among the last of their kind.
鈥淚t needs to be kept as a part of our story,鈥 she said.
Pannett said after speaking with property developers, she believed it could have been restored to its former glory at a 鈥渞easonable cost鈥.
The university had previously suggested restoration could cost between $30 and $40 million.
鈥淭his is also a story of failure on behalf of both Housing New Zealand and the university; they鈥檝e been poor owners. This building could have been restored.鈥
Pannett said the heritage community would continue to oppose moves to make it easier to demolish buildings.
LIVE Wellington, a pro-heritage advocacy group, recently took Wellington City Council to court over its District Plan changes, which was thrown out by the court.
Convenor Jane O鈥橪oughlin said the group are not taking any legal action about Gordon Wilson flats specifically.
鈥淪uch a shame they have been left to decay, could have been housing people,鈥 O鈥橪oughlin said.
Councillor Iona Pannett says Bishop's move to delist the flats is 鈥渄eeply unfortunate鈥. Photo / Mark Mitchell.
Bishop is celebrating the looming delisting as a mark of progress for the city, saying 鈥渢he people of Wellington want them demolished鈥.
鈥淢any Wellingtonians will be relieved to know the Gordon Wilson Flats鈥 days of heritage protection are numbered, and that it is unlikely to mar our beautiful city鈥檚 skyline for too much longer,鈥 Bishop said.
Built in 1959 and designed by Government architect Gordon Wilson, the building is seen as an iconic symbol of early social housing in New Zealand.
In 2012, tenants were evicted after an engineer鈥檚 report deemed it unsafe in the event of an earthquake or strong winds. It has remained vacant since and fallen into disrepair.
It was then purchased by the university which wanted to develop the site by building a multimillion-dollar gateway to the campus above, Te Huanui, made up of 鈥渨orld-class teaching and research facilities surrounded by lively civic spaces鈥.
Its heritage status meant it could not be demolished.
The Te Huanui project was canned last year in favour of student accommodation.
Victoria University acting vice-chancellor and Provost Bryony James told the Herald demolition will happen 鈥渨ithin the next year鈥.
James said the university welcomes Bishop鈥檚 decision and the building is not 鈥渟erving our student community or the city in any way鈥.
鈥淲hen we purchased the building, it was already deteriorating and unsafe for people to live in.
鈥淲e have scoped the options and the safest and most cost-effective use of the site is to demolish the building and construct good quality, affordable and warm student accommodation.
鈥淗aving the heritage status removed will mean we can now progress a development that benefits our student community and the city.鈥
Ethan Manera New Zealand Herald journalist based in Wellington. He joined 九一星空无限 in 2023 as a broadcast journalist and is interested in local issues, politics and property in the capital. Ethan can be emailed at [email protected].
Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you
Get the iHeart App
Get more of the radio, music and podcasts you love with the FREE iHeartRadio app. Scan the QR code to download now.
Download from the app stores
Stream unlimited music, thousands of radio stations and podcasts all in one app. iHeartRadio is easy to use and all FREE