Dorset Street Flats

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TypeResidential
Architectural styleModernist, Christchurch School
LocationChristchurch Central, New Zealand
Year(s) built1956–1957
Dorset Street Flats
Dorset Street Flats in the 1970s
General information
TypeResidential
Architectural styleModernist, Christchurch School
LocationChristchurch Central, New Zealand
Year(s) built1956–1957
Design and construction
Architect(s)Miles Warren
EngineerLyall Holmes
Main contractorCecil Davenport
Renovating team
Architect(s)Greg Young of Young Architects
Awards and prizes2023 New Zealand Architecture Awards
Reference no.7804

The Dorset Street Flats is a mid-century modernist apartment complex in Christchurch, New Zealand. It was designed by Miles Warren and built in the late 1950s. It is credited as an essential example of Christchurch Style architecture and is regarded among the most significant twentieth-century architectural projects in New Zealand. In 2010, Heritage New Zealand listed it as a Category 1 historic place.

The building was originally derided by the public for its unconventional approach, particularly its brutalist aspects. However, it was praised by contemporary architects and retrospectively appreciated, regarded as an important project in establishing the Christchurch School of architecture, a modernist design language developed in Christchurch.

The Dorset Street Flats complex underwent a significant restoration following the 2011 Christchurch earthquake, but retains much of its essential character. The apartments are privately owned and the building continues to operate as a residential apartment complex.

Architect Sir Miles Warren in his office in the 1970s

The Dorset Street Flats were designed in 1956 by Sir Miles Warren. It was among his earliest projects after beginning his design practice the year earlier, and predated his partnership with Maurice Mahoney in 1958.[1] Warren designed the buildings for himself and three friends: Michael Weston, Simon Wood and Michael Davis.[2]

The complex was originally built on 771 square metres and comprised eight one-bedroom apartments which featured built-in furniture and fittings, with the conversion of a preexisting stable block allowing for a ninth apartment. The design also had four garages and courtyards, and a communal laundry area.[2][3]

Warren was inspired by aspects of modernism and New Brutalism, the latter which he had been exposed to during his time in Britain in the 1950s.[2] The project was a stark departure from other residential buildings at the time, many which were inspired by Edwardian and Victorian styles. He earned praise from critics and fellow architects, but public reception was more critical; the buildings were compared to a prison complex and reportedly jeered at by detouring busses, colloquially nicknamed "Fort Dorset".[4][3] For a time, the complex was panned as "Christchurch's ugliest building".[5] In his autobiography, Warren said: "as a young architect I was proud to achieve such notoriety".[3]

The buildings were constructed by Cecil Davenport, his brother Snow, and an apprentice. The original construction posed engineering challenges, including water leaking into the porous concrete blocks. Warren and Weston both worked on the building manually completing the finishing, painting, and garden landscaping.[3]

Heritage restoration

Legacy

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI