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Outlook > 2008 > April
What a swell city Napier is
FAR
from the world's great population centres in Europe and America, where
20th Century design evolved, lies a small city that is uniquely New
Zealand.
Napier, in the heart of the Hawke's Bay region, was rebuilt in the early 1930s following a massive earthquake.
Subsequent fires destroyed most of its commercial heart and by the end of the decade Napier was the newest city on the globe.
Today, Napier is said to have the largest collection of Art Deco
buildings outside Miami. Nowhere else in the Southern hemisphere can
visitors see such a variety of buildings in the styles of the 1930s -
Stripped Classical, Spanish Mission, and above all Art Deco, the style
of the 20th Century - in such a concentrated area.
The earthquake hits
It was from tragedy that today's architectural treasure was created. At
10.46am on February 3 1931 Napier and its surroundings was struck by an
earthquake that measured 7.8 on the Richter Scale. It lasted 2.5
minutes and claimed 261 lives.
Fires started raging all over town, beginning in chemists' shops where
gas jets were in close proximity to flammable liquids. One hour after
the earthquake, the fires were spreading rapidly while the water supply
was lost and there was little that firemen could do.
People, afraid to enter their homes, camped in their gardens, on
road-sides, at Nelson Park and on the Marine Parade Beach. Over the
next two weeks 525 aftershocks were felt in the region.
As a result of the earthquake the Napier area tilted upwards, a maximum
of just over two metres (seven feet) and 2230 hectares (5575 acres)
were raised to sea level. Since then, apparently, the area has
continued to creep up at the rate of 1cm per year, so that it is now
60cms (or two feet) above sea level.
Reconstructing Napier
In the 1920s Art Deco was fashionable. In architecture it is
characterized by the skyscraper shape, sunbursts and fountains, and
geometric shapes. Art Deco was safe, as all new buildings had to be
built of concrete - a material then thought to be resistant to
earthquakes and fire.
And it was cheap to build with concrete. The typical relief stucco
ornaments were an economical way to beautify buildings during the Great
Depression.
In Napier, four architectural practises banded together after the
earthquake to share facilities and bring a unity of purpose to the task
of rebuilding the town, working in shifts around the clock. But they
continued to design the buildings individually. These firms were:
• E A Williams, who favored the Art Deco style.
• Finch & Westerholm, which designed mainly in the Spanish Mission style.
• J A Louis Hay, who usually designed buildings inspired by the
work of Frank Lloyd Wright, and occasionally Louis Sullivan.
• Natusch & Sons, whose work tended to reflect the growing modern movement.
As a result of these combined efforts Napier in a variety of
architectural styles was rebuilt near completion only two years later.
Reliving the past
By the late 1930s Art Deco was in its Streamline or Streamline Moderne
phase. This followed manufacturing and streamlining techniques arising
from science and mass production. Not until the late 1960s did people
begin to rediscover Art Deco as a symbol for vigor and optimism of the
Roaring Twenties.
In Napier the nostalgia very much lives on. An Art Deco Trust was
established in 1985 to promote and preserve what is now recognised as a
world-class collection of Art Deco architecture. The trust offers a
variety of activities such as guided historical walks and vintage cars
tours.
The annual highlight is the Art Deco Weekend which is held every year,
on the third weekend of February. The entire town turns back the clock
and dresses in their deco finest.
Vintage cars, vintage planes, picnics, concerts, street parades, naval
ships, dancing in the street, jazz, eating and drinking are part of
more than 100 events that make up the celebration. Napier becomes fully
immersed in the atmosphere of the 1930s. |