St Elmo Courts

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TypeApartments in high-rise, mostly converted to offices
LocationCorner Hereford and Montreal Streets, Christchurch Central City, 47 Hereford Street
Christchurch
Coordinates43°31′55″S 172°37′52″E / 43.5319°S 172.6310°E / -43.5319; 172.6310
Construction started1930
St Elmo Courts
St Elmo Courts in January 2010
Interactive map of the St Elmo Courts area
General information
TypeApartments in high-rise, mostly converted to offices
LocationCorner Hereford and Montreal Streets, Christchurch Central City, 47 Hereford Street
Christchurch
Coordinates43°31′55″S 172°37′52″E / 43.5319°S 172.6310°E / -43.5319; 172.6310
Construction started1930
Inaugurated1930
DemolishedMarch 2011
Technical details
Floor count8
Design and construction
ArchitectB. J. Ager
Designated26-Nov-1981
Reference no.3133
References
"St Elmo Courts". New Zealand Heritage List/Rārangi Kōrero. Heritage New Zealand. Retrieved 21 March 2011.

St Elmo Courts was a residential high rise building constructed in 1930 in the city centre of Christchurch, New Zealand. Used mainly as an office building in later years, it had a Category II heritage listing by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust. It was demolished in March 2011, having suffered significant damage in the 2010 Canterbury earthquake and more damage in the subsequent February 2011 Christchurch earthquake.

The site of the building, on the corner of Hereford and Montreal Streets, was occupied by the St Elmo Boarding House. It was advertised as "superior private accommodation".[1] A replacement building, St Elmo Courts, was designed in 1929 by B. J. Ager.[2] This reflected a movement in the larger New Zealand cities in the 1920s and 1930s for apartment living. The appeals were inexpensive living in a central location, with apartments offering modern conveniences and built in furniture.[3] St Elmo Courts was constructed in 1930.[4] Accordingly, St Elmo Court provided bedsits and two-bedroom apartments. Many of those were later converted to office space.[5]

After the 2010 Canterbury earthquake, the building was yellow stickered (meaning restricted access only).[6] The building's owner and his insurance company agreed that it was too damaged after the 22 February 2011 earthquake for it to be saved. Demolition began on 20 March 2011.[7]

Structural design and failure mechanism

Demolition of St Elmo Courts in March 2011.
Shear failure detail.

St Elmo Court had a light reinforced concrete frame that was infilled with masonry. Following the 4 September 2010 earthquake, diagonal shear cracks were visible in the façade in the vertical piers.[8] One column had a shear failure. The damage became more extensive in the 22 February 2011 earthquake.[9]

Rebuild

Heritage listing

References

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