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One is the national register administered by Heritage New Zealand [1] and the other is the register in the Christchurch City Plan. [2] The scope of this article is the Heritage New Zealand register only. There are four parts to the national register; historic places, historic areas, Wahi Tapu (places sacred to Māori) and Wahi Tapu areas. [1]
The western façade of the historic building was to be retained. [9] The Christchurch Heritage Trust sold the site to developers Miles Yeoman and Craig Newbury as they needed the money to concentrate on the renovations of the Trinity Congregational Church and Shand's Emporium. The new owners had the remaining façade demolished on 10 April 2016 ...
The building was registered as a heritage building by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust on 26 November 1981 with registration number 1863 classified as Category II listing. [2] The Christchurch City Council also lists the Curator's House as a Heritage Place for its "high historical and social significance for its association with the ...
[8] [12] The Savoy Theatre was later registered as a Category II building by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust, [8] but it was demolished in 1993. [13] In the 1960s, the pediment and the parapets were removed from Warner's Hotel. [8] The gap left by the demolished Savoy developed into a beer garden, and it became a popular place. [14]
Detail of Market Place on the map of Christchurch in 1862 by C. E. Fooks. Christchurch was surveyed by Joseph Thomas and Edward Jollie in March 1850, and on these earliest maps the area that became Victoria Square is marked as grassland. [10] On Black Map 273 the area straddling the river can already be seen marked as "Market Place". [11]
Market Place in 1864 during the construction of the Papanui Bridge. The Canterbury foothills were hit by a severe rainstorm on 3 February 1868, and the Waimakariri River broke its banks between Courtenay and Halkett (near Kirwee), entering the headwater of the Avon River at Avonhead. The flood water reached Christchurch at 10 am of the ...
Ireland ratified the convention on 16 September 1991. [3] As of 2025, Ireland has two sites on the list, and a further three on the tentative list. [3] The first site listed was Brú na Bóinne – Archaeological Ensemble of the Bend of the Boyne, in 1993. The second site, Sceilg Mhichíl, was listed in 1996.
On 11 July 1991 the Christchurch City Council purchased the building from the government for $735,000. The council then sold it to the ‘Symphony Group’ in 1995 and it was converted into a hotel with the conditions to strengthen and conserve the building. [1] [4] It is now home to the Heritage Hotel Christchurch and the bar O.G.B. [5] [6]
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