St Patrick's Catherdral - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Mon, 29 Oct 2018 09:23:22 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg St Patrick's Catherdral - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Restoration of Auckland's St Patrick's presbytery underway https://cathnews.co.nz/2018/10/29/restoration-st-patricks-presbytery/ Mon, 29 Oct 2018 07:02:48 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=113252 st patrick's presbytery

St Patrick's Presbytery on the corner of Hobson St and Wyndham St, alongside St Patrick's Cathedral in Auckland, is to be restored and upgraded. The 130-year-old brick building has a Category A heritage rating, the highest possible. It is said by heritage architects to be Auckland inner-city's oldest continually-occupied residence. An Auckland diocese spokeswoman told Read more

Restoration of Auckland's St Patrick's presbytery underway... Read more]]>
St Patrick's Presbytery on the corner of Hobson St and Wyndham St, alongside St Patrick's Cathedral in Auckland, is to be restored and upgraded.

The 130-year-old brick building has a Category A heritage rating, the highest possible.

It is said by heritage architects to be Auckland inner-city's oldest continually-occupied residence.

An Auckland diocese spokeswoman told the New Zealand Herald last week: "The land on which the Cathedral of St Patrick and St Joseph stands in Wyndham St was granted to Bishop Pompallier by Governor Hobson on June 1, 1841.

The adjacent land where the St Patrick's presbytery stands was purchased some years later by [a] parishioner."

The Presbytery was built in 1888 to an Edward Mahoney design and has served as home to the Cathedral priests for the past 125 years.

Only superficial changes have been made to the building since it was constructed, its heritage listing shows.

It is an earthquake-prone building with its brittle bricks and sea-sand mortar, the roof leaks and the paintwork require attention.

Documents lodged with Auckland Council showed the Hobson St boundary retaining wall will be strengthened, and an outbuilding beside the presbytery will be demolished.

Trenches will be dug for new utilities from Wyndham St, sub-floor ventilation will be improved, and a brick boundary wall built in 1957 to the east will be removed.

Paving from St Patrick's Square will be extended and a 1970s carport will be demolished, along with a trellis wall.

Inside, lowered or false ceilings will be removed, the kitchen extended, a new bathroom and pantry built and plywood diaphragms installed on ground and level one ceilings for seismic strengthening, according to the documents.

Gregory Shanahan, a lawyer and Cathedral Centre Board chairman said they have raised all the funds required to meet the costs of the project.

He said the works are programmed to be finished in June next year.

Source

Restoration of Auckland's St Patrick's presbytery underway]]>
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Appeal launched to restore heritage cathedral presbytery https://cathnews.co.nz/2015/09/11/appeal-launched-to-restore-of-heritage-cathedral-presbytery/ Thu, 10 Sep 2015 19:01:06 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=76381

For 130 years the large two-storey brick building on the corner of Wyndham and Hobson Sts in Auckland's central city has been home for the Catholic priests based at St Patrick's Cathedral. This historical building is the longest, continually lived in residence in the central city. A Category A heritage building (Heritage NZ - register Read more

Appeal launched to restore heritage cathedral presbytery... Read more]]>
For 130 years the large two-storey brick building on the corner of Wyndham and Hobson Sts in Auckland's central city has been home for the Catholic priests based at St Patrick's Cathedral.

This historical building is the longest, continually lived in residence in the central city.

A Category A heritage building (Heritage NZ - register 2645), St Patrick's presbytery (or priests' house) has been a familiar feature of the downtown cityscape for generations of Aucklanders.

However it is now badly in need of strengthening and restoring. It is an earthquake-prone building with its brittle bricks and sea sand mortar.

The roof is leaking and the paintwork desperately requires attention.

In order to preserve its heritage status, and provide a healthy, secure home for the clergy who live there, an Appeal to the cathedral parishioners and friends was launched last weekend to raise funds for a major strengthening and restoration programme for the building. It is estimated that the cost will be in the vicinity of 2.75 to 3 million dollars.

Commuters and passers-by will now see promotional hoardings and bandages (skins) around three sides of the presbytery walls along with photos of how it looked when first it was erected over 130 years ago.

The commencement of the project, depending on fund-raising, is scheduled to begin in one year's time. All going well the newly restored residence will be re-opened by mid-2017.

Donations can be received at givealittle.co.nz/cause/stpatsappeal

For more information visit www.stpatsappeal.org.nz or contact
Mr Kevin Sherlock (Cathedral Centre Manager) Ph 303 4509 ext 202, or mobile 021 300 901

Source
Supplied Catholic Diocese of Auckand

Appeal launched to restore heritage cathedral presbytery]]>
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