Pavement stencil with legs in Bulls, Horowhenua
2012

oozey mess
Cosmic Funnies

Love Begins
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

if i look back, i am lost

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❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Stranger Things
h
Peter Solarz
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Xuebing Du
YOU ARE THE REASON
Three Goblin Art
Mike Driver

pixel skylines
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"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
ojovivo
NASA

seen from Türkiye
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seen from Malaysia

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@sunshineisbottled
Pavement stencil with legs in Bulls, Horowhenua
2012
IMG_1368 on Flickr.
The ‘The’. Canterbury Museum.
Petrol station in Pattaya, Thailand 2005
Stencil at top of Coromandel St in Newtown, Wellington
Post in the ocean
IMG_1227 on Flickr.
Christchurch Drainage Board sign, on the Pump House. Via Flickr: Monday 23 December 2013.
St James Theatre, Dunedin
For me growing up in Dunedin, nothing filled me with more excitement than going to see a movie at the Century or the St James. Both theatres were incredibly dramatic in very different ways. The Century was an art deco grande dame while the St James was an 'atmospheric' theatre (the other being the Civic in Auckland).
The rubble of the Century and graffiti that inevitably filled the gap. Courtesy of http://www.dunedinfringe.org.nz.
Paerau/Styx, Maniototo
^J
What fresh hedge is this?!
^J
Some of the war memorials ^P and I have sought out and stumbled across in Dunedin and the Maniototo. I know ^P has more to add to this!
Waipiata Sanatorium, Maniototo
History
"In 1914 the Waipiata Sanatorium, a private facility, was constructed a few kilometres along the Waipiata/Patearoa road near the old Hamiltons gold field. Taken over by the Hospital Board in the early 1920s, the substantial buildings, which mostly still exist, in 1925 began a long period of caring for those with tuberculosis. The Sanatorium closed in 1961 and the buildings became a corrective and training centre for the Justice Department until 1979. They are now a private Christian retreat." (from Wikipedia)
Today
The approach to the Sanatorium is a dirt road. It's dry, not just the land but the air as well, perfect conditions for what was considered best for tuberculosis hospitals.
A left turn leads up a tar-sealed road. Odd considering the dirt road leading there but it gives a sense that all the roads leading to the hospital in its hey-day were sealed. There's a massive schist outcrop that blocks the view of Sanatorium from the road, then this emerges.
This is the front of, what we think, is the nurses' quarter, across the road from the main buildings. From the side, the building goes back about 15 rooms long and two storeys high with a long verandah.
On the right of the road is the entrance to the Sanatorium proper. It's a Christian retreat now and we saw a woman coming out and asked her what the go was. The sign said to report to Hebron House within the grounds but we discovered the caretaker was ill...so...we drove in anyway...as quietly and respectfully as a '66 Chevy Caprice coupe can.
The backs of the main buildings are on the left and this little gem was the first building on the right.
I'd love to know where the brickworks that supplied this build is. The bricks are a soft, rosy red that I haven't seen anywhere else in the Maniototo.
This is original plaque on the front of what might have been the office. Public/private partnerships in action in the 1930s!
Most photos are taken from the car as you will see through the blog. The Sanatorium was built to be completely self-sufficient and the current tenants take full advantage of this greenhouse. I identified tomatoes and peppers. Also: greenhouse envy.
Then we came round to the front of the the main buildings. These may have been accommodation for gardeners and groundspeople.
"...showed us photograph albums of the buildings and people associated with the place, nurses, workers and patients. One showed wards, specially designed with large windows that were open to the elements. In winter patients had to have their hot water bottles filled every two hours to prevent hypothermia. I wondered how the poor nurses survived the conditions and if they were made to adhere to the uniforms of the day or allowance was made for the cold." (From Kath Baynes)
This building may have been the communal hall with a dining hall in the back.
I think the basketball court was a later addition. But look at that structure! Very cool. Also the outlook over the expanse of the Maniototo plain is stunning.
As we left, we passed the engine room of the complex. Behind those buildings we could see the chimney stack for what we think is the boiler/generator room. The main building in front is now the office "Hebron House".
Outside the gates, beside the nurses' quarters, are more substantial houses, probably the superintendent's and other key staff.
It would've been good to get out of the car, talk to the current occupants and have a look inside. But we tried to remain as unobtrusive as possible given we didn't have permission to be on site.
This post is for @lilith_grace as her grandfather worked at the Sanatorium.
^J
I've taken excerpts from Kath Baynes' entry to a 2011 Memoir & Local History competition and from Wikipedia to inform this blog.
Sargood Centre, Logan Park
The Sargood Centre at Logan Park has recently been taken over, and more importantly, restored by the Otago Institute of Sports. I remember it best as the former Dunedin Public Art Gallery-a sanctuary for my teenaged friends and me on rainy afternoons in the late 80s/early 90s.
History
The origins of this building and other buildings in the complex lie in probably the greatest show to hit New Zealand shores EVER. Dunedin was chosen to host the New Zealand and South Seas International Exhibition opening in November 1925.
HMS NEPTUNE and HMS ACHILLES memorials
December 19 marks the anniversary of the sinking of the Leander-class light cruiser HMS NEPTUNE in 1941. It is the greatest single tragedy New Zealand Naval Forces have experienced.The lily held in place with two stones is a poignant reminder of the service the Royal New Zealand Navy held here recently. Read more about HMS NEPTUNE.
At the other end of the country, in St Heliers, Auckland, is the memorial to those who served on the HMS (latterly HMNZS) ACHILLES, most famous for her part in the victory of the Battle of the River Plate.
Northern Cemetery
I could spend hours in this historic cemetery - one of twenty cemeteries in Dunedin. It's the resting place of William Larnach, Charles Speight, and Thomas Bracken. Didn't have time to have a decent wander so just snaps of what caught my eye. There'll be a separate post for WWI-related graves and images.
^J
You can't see Transit House from the road.Snuck up the long driveway to photograph it and got busted.Ended up yarning about its history & restoration.There used to be a observatory on top of it but it's long gone.
Architect: John Arthur Burnside
Sorry about the odd angles. The trees come in very close to the house
^J
North East Valley takeaways.
Steak, bacon,pineapple & cheese + double cheese burger = $10
7/10 - will eat again
^J
Fences, hedges, gates.
The turnstile is at the entrance to Bishopgrove, one of Dunedin's most stately houses in Glenleith. I have been in the house before but it's a private home so visitors are frowned upon. You can, however, rent the stone gatehouse.
'A Town Called Alice' by Nevil Shute was made into a tv series in 1981 and the Scottish scenes, featuring Gordon Jackson, were shot at Bishopgrove.
^J