Bay of Plenty Times

Wharenui rebuild decades after quake

- Megan Wilson

A wharenui destroyed by an earthquake nearly 100 years ago is being rebuilt in a $1.2 million project using traditiona­l Ma¯ori constructi­on methods.

The “beautifull­y carved” Ta¯newhirinak­i wharenui near Opo¯tiki has received funding from Toka Tu¯ Ake Earthquake Commission to be rebuilt and enhance its seismic resilience after it was destroyed in the Napier earthquake in 1931.

Architect and researcher Professor Anthony Hoete said he and his team from the University of Auckland would rebuild it using a “lashing” technology, which was used by Ma¯ori when they first arrived in Aotearoa.

The team were working closely with Nga¯ti lra o Waioweka, who built the original wharenui.

The most important carvings representi­ng the iwi’s ancestors were saved from the wreckage and stored in a shed at the marae for nine decades.

“This is not just any old house — this is a monster whare beautifull­y carved and sadly no longer standing,” Hoete said.

Before Europeans arrived in Aotearoa, Ma¯ori built their whare the same way they built waka, Hoete said.

“[Ma¯ori] would have turned them upside down, taken shelter beneath them, and eventually that would have informed the way we build our first whare.”

This involved technology of “lashing and tying as a constructi­on technique”.

“When the Europeans arrived with their screws, bolts and drills, that technology would have been lost because it would have been far easier to nail something together.”

Hoete explained lashing as putting the constructi­on element into tension.

“It’s a bit like a bow and arrow. [When] you pull on the string of a bow, the wooden part bends . . . When you put the tension lines across the top of the whare . . . The house is being pulled into the ground through tensioning ropes.

“What we’re hoping with this post-tensioning is that it doesn’t lead to buildings collapsing after a seismic hit — you can go and recalibrat­e the building and adjust the seismic strength or resistance.

“The structure is no longer static — the structure is dynamic.

“That is the beauty of this particular type of Ma¯ori constructi­on technique.”

Hoete said the project would transform the local community by teaching local students about seismic resilience and empowering rangatahi to go to university.

The project would also aim to employ local builders.

Asked why it had taken so long to rebuild the wharenui, Hoete said it came down to money.

His team had received “considerab­le” funding for the project but was still about $500,000 short for the $1.2m project.

The next step would be building a “full-scale prototype” for testing.

The outputs of this would be used in the final design and constructi­on of the wharenui.

Toka Tu¯ Ake Earthquake Commission

research manager Dr Natalie Balfour said the “exciting” project would keep Ma¯ori knowledge in the community and ensure a modern wharenui could withstand the elements.

Balfour said it wanted to ensure buildings were resilient to natural hazards such as earthquake­s.

“Quite often these buildings are used as a place where the community gathers and supports each other during times that are difficult such as after an event.

“Making sure that they perform and they remain there to support these communitie­s through those times is really important.”

Balfour said the project was a way to learn about constructi­on methods which were not necessaril­y part of modern building resilience.

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 ?? ?? Architect and researcher Professor Anthony Hoete says the rebuild will use traditiona­l “lashing” technology.
Architect and researcher Professor Anthony Hoete says the rebuild will use traditiona­l “lashing” technology.
 ?? ?? The carvings in the pop-up wharenui are the original ones from the Ta¯newhirinak­i wharenui.
The carvings in the pop-up wharenui are the original ones from the Ta¯newhirinak­i wharenui.

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